Romanelli sees JET as "main risk mitigation" for ITER

17 Dec 2012 - ITER Communication
On 13 December, Francesco Romanelli of EFDA-JET presented "JET results with the ITER-like wall."
On the afternoon last year when the team from the European tokamak JET attempted first plasma after an 18-month shutdown, Associate Leader Francesco Romanelli remained in his first-floor office. "I wasn't expecting the machine to perform so faultlessly on its first attempt," he later explained. "Besides, things had a way of going wrong when I entered the room, so maybe it was better after all."
 
That anecdote and others were related by Romanelli at last week's Inside ITER seminar, during which he gave a first-hand overview of the ITER-like wall campaign that has been running at JET since that first (very successful) day back in August 2011. Three thousand installable items and 16,000 tiles had been replaced in the machine (non-metal carbon tiles were replaced by the metals beryllium and tungsten) to equip JET with the same materials mix chosen for ITER.
 
Romanelli reported in detail on the experimental results so far: demonstration of low fuel retention, tungsten divertor successfully tested, observations related to the dynamics of disruptions ...
 
"Overall, the operation of the ITER-like wall has been easier than expected, giving us the confidence that the fusion community is making the right choice for ITER. We see JET as the main risk mitigation measure in support of ITER."
 
The European Fusion Development Agreement is already looking ahead to other roles for JET—developing plasma scenarios in ITER-relevant configurations and testing the compatibility of the wall with the use of tritium. "JET can provide unique input in a number of technical and operational areas."
 
David Campbell, director of ITER's Plasma Operation Directorate, agrees: "The crucial ITER-like wall experiment will give us insight—ahead of ITER operation—as to how fusion plasmas will behave in the presence of the plasma-facing mixture that we're planning to use in ITER."

For more on JET's ITER-like wall campaign, visit the EFDA-JET website.