COMSOL Modeling for the DIII-D Helicon Antenna Test Stand Experiment

POSTER

Abstract

A program integrating COMSOL modeling of the 1 MW helicon antenna has explored design parameters such as RF coupling between modules, multipactor analysis, heat dissipation and mitigation of disruption forces. A 30-module comb-line antenna is being designed for driving off-axis non-inductive current in the DIII-D tokamak using electromagnetic waves at 476 MHz and 2.1 T of magnetic field. In order to validate design criteria, an experimental module is built using a segmented version of an antenna module. This test module is fed with 7 kW of RF power (450-525 MHz), with up to 0.1 T of background magnetic field. In addition the planned 1MW stripline power feed is explored using a high-Q RF resonator designed to replicate the electromagnetic field values of the stripline and stripline-to-module connection interface using the available 7 kW of power. COMSOL was used to simulate the RF characteristics of the segmented module and to design and optimize the RF performance of the resonator. Data on the scaled module: magnetic field, electric field, temperatures and RF resonator performance are presented.

*This material is based upon work supported by the Department of Energy under Cooperative Agreement DE-FC02-04ER54698.

Presenters

  • M. Medrano

    • Peruvian University of Applied Sciences, Lima, Peru

Authors

  • M. Medrano

    • Peruvian University of Applied Sciences, Lima, Peru
  • Michael W Brookman

    • General Atomics, CA, USA
    • General Atomics
  • Humberto Torreblanca

    • General Atomics, CA, USA
    • General Atomics - San Diego
  • Charles Moeller

    • General Atomics, CA, USA
    • General Atomics
  • Robert I Pinsker

    • General Atomics - San Diego
    • GA
    • General Atomics, CA, USA
    • General Atomics