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Tokamak systems monitor

A constant health check

ITER, as the first reactor-scale fusion device, will help the world understand more about the necessary tradeoff between maximal performance and equipment lifetime. A new suite of software, the tokamak systems monitor, will assist engineers in striking the right balance—and more.

Prototype control room interface for the tokamak systems monitor, using red/amber/green light to show the overall status of systems and components. A 3D representation of the machine allows zoom-in, zoom-out and rotation—and includes a more fine-graded scale indicating the effect of a detected event on each of the tokamak systems.
The tokamak systems monitor (TSM) will provide an integrated view of the machine's condition in near real time, with delays generally under 1 second, so operators can see what is going on inside the machine—and if necessary, react immediately. The system, under development by the Port Plugs & Diagnostics Division team, will also provide an even fuller set of information within minutes to help engineers and scientists make adjustments between pulses. While its primarily role will be to follow the use of the machine against design limits as the tokamak progresses though its lifetime, a happy by-product of the way it is being developed is that it can also be used to refine engineering models during the design phase.

From a huge volume of data to an intuitive presentation

Exploring the operating profile of ITER is a complex task—and even though the machine was designed for robustness, all operations must be performed with extreme care. If sensor data processed by the tokamak systems monitor indicates that one or more systems reacts too far from the expected range, operators will analyze possible causes and make adjustments to home in on exactly what is going on. If on the other hand, all systems behave well, they will increase loads to further optimize the performance against design parameters.

The primary source of information used by the TSM diagnostic is a collection of operational instrumentation sensors that are generally provided with the equipment they measure (for example, magnet coils) and that are separate from the specialized diagnostics used to monitor the main plant systems. Complementary data will be taken from plant systems such as water cooling and coil power supplies, as well as from the plasma control system and the diagnostics that measure events from the plasma to the first wall.

Even with all this input, the tokamak systems monitor will still have gaps to fill, simply because putting a sensor on every component and in every critical location would be impossible. Using a process called "reconstruction," the tokamak systems monitor will take information from local sensors and apply carefully developed and tested analysis and simulation models to figure out the behaviour of the entire machine.

The software suite will routinely serve up a health status, and actual machine margins, to operators. At a simple level, one can think of the presentation as lights representing each system, remaining green when all is well, and flipping to amber or red if some action has to be taken. From this simple dashboard, experienced operators will be able drill down much deeper to find out what is happening across the whole plant.

Considering the number of interactions between the different systems, it is easy to appreciate the unique value of the tokamak systems monitor.

Interleaved reconstruction algorithms and simulation models

The tokamak systems monitor starts by applying sophisticated reconstruction algorithms that take sensor data and reconstruct global behaviour of the tokamak, taking into account the timing of each event. The algorithms are said to be "interleaved" in that any given algorithm may cover several tokamak systems, and any given tokamak system may be served by multiple algorithms.

These freshly reconstructed global parameters are then used as input for simulation models—usually based on finite element analysis—to calculate specific engineering data for all points of interest, and compare those with a range of limits to report to the operator. The tokamak systems monitor also archives the output for future use.

Through this process, the software is able to deliver specific engineering data for all parts of the machine—including locations where sensors cannot be installed, or where they were installed, but are no longer functioning.

Prototype of the operator interface provided by the tokamak systems monitor, allowing a comparison of the expected behaviour with what is reconstructed by the TSM diagnostic through direct measurements. In this example, a screen shows transient displacement parameters, which can be plotted as time-dependent graphs for locations requiring attention and fine analysis, or as 3D color-coded contours over a specified interval.
The methodology has already been developed and used in various industries and other tokamaks—but none as complex as ITER. The approach used at ITER differs in two ways. "First, as far as we know, the level of multi-physics in our algorithms and models has never been done before in fusion," says Daniel Iglesias, Tokamak Systems Monitor Coordinator. "In a tokamak you have several events that are really fast and that involve a whole lot of different phenomena. Typically, the different impacts—for example, heat transfer phenomena, static and transient electromagnetics, dynamic (inertial) phenomena, and the stress fields—are analyzed in isolation. But of course in reality, these things happen at the same time and their effects overlap. In a tokamak the overlaps are more substantial and involve a larger variety of engineering disciplines than in common industries, so we need to reconstruct and then simulate many of them all together in order to get a complete picture of what is happening inside the machine. This multi-physics, or multi-disciplinary engineering, is one of our big challenges."

"The second thing that's unique," adds Sergey Sadakov, Tokamak Systems Monitor Engineer, "is that unlike all industrial applications of similar diagnostic systems, we are taking an unusually large step from current machines to ITER. Some of the modern tokamaks do have some instrumentation and use some reconstruction algorithms. But if you compare the volume of instrumentation and the variety of parameters they have to reconstruct with what we do at ITER, the difference is one or two orders of magnitude. We are taking one giant step up to several tens of thousands of channels of data coming in, and several hundred reconstruction algorithms and simulation models running simultaneously. This is the future of fusion, the dawning of an industrial approach."

Refining engineering models well before the machine becomes operational

"Our development strategy is to have six releases of the software suite, each with consequently wider functionality," says Iglesias. "In a year we will demonstrate the first working version—of course with limited functionality, but with the basic ingredients. And then the development will be incremental. The full system will be ready at the end of 2024, to be integrated before First Plasma. The upgrades will keep coming even after the machine begins operation. Once the ITER Tokamak is operating we will start with the validation phase, and then I'm sure we'll have a lot of ideas on how it can be improved."

But even now, years before the reactor becomes operational, the tokamak systems monitor simulation tools are playing an important role. By comparing the output from the simulators to the engineering models used in design, scientists and engineers are able to make changes to engineering models far in advance.

"Thanks to the development of the simulation models, we are already able to check the designs and make sure any cross-couplings are handled well," says Alexander Alekseev, Senior Advisor on tokamak engineering to the ITER Director-General. "So well before First Plasma, this system is already adding value to the development of the ITER machine."