Large area divertor temperature measurements using a high-speed, near-infrared camera in NSTX

POSTER

Abstract

IR band-pass filters ($>720$ nm or $> 900$ nm) were used with a Phantom 7.3 high-speed camera to try to measure the surface temperature of plasma facing components and the Liquid Lithium Divertor (LLD) in NSTX. The present camera looks through an upper port with a view of more than half of the lower divertor. With several megawatts of RF heating power, the observed surface temperature increased by $\sim$700 $^{\circ}$C in a localized region magnetically connected to the RF antenna. Such a wide-angle, high-speed (up to 10$^4$ fps) IR system could also evaluate the thermal response to transient events such as ELMs and disruptions, which can cause large, uneven heat loads over a wide area of the divertor. The rise/fall time during power transients and emission spectroscopy diagnostics were used to help distinguish plasma IR line emission from surface blackbody emission. The entire system has been calibrated with a blackbody source from 350 to 700 $^{\circ}$C.

*This work is supported by DOE contract number DE-AC02-09CH11466.

Authors

  • B.C. Lyons

    • (PPPL)
  • S. Zweben

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    • (PPPL)
    • PPPL
  • Filippo Scotti

    • PPPL
    • (PPPL)
    • Princeton
  • A.L. Roquemore

    • (PPPL)
  • R.J. Maqueda

    • PPPL
    • (PPPL)
  • H.W. Kugel

    • P.P.P.L.
    • PPPL
    • (PPPL)
    • Princeton Plasma Physics Lab
  • R. Kaita

    • PPPL
    • (PPPL)
  • Adam McLean

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    • Oak Ridge National Labratory
    • (ORNL)
    • ORNL
  • Vlad Soukhanovskii

    • LLNL
    • (LLNL)