Record heat shield against steady-state heat flux 100 MW/m² (not only) for tokamaks

ORAL

Abstract

Effectively withstanding the extreme surface heat fluxes, possibly exceeding the limit 20 MW/m² of the best nowadays shields, continues to pose one of the last few major unresolved engineering challenges for a practical thermonuclear fusion reactor. We present a novel STEAM heat shield aimed for a tokamak or stellarator divertors and potentially applicable also in microwave gyrotrons or solid rocket combustion chambers. It employs high-speed liquid impingement cooling, developed and systematically validated under extreme heat flux conditions. The design facilitates efficient boiling-driven heat removal. It is tested on a plasma torch, supported by heat transfer simulations, infrared thermography and calorimetry. Our shield sustained for over 20 minutes a steady-state heat flux of 73 MW/m² (31 kW across 4.2 cm2), exceeding conditions on the Sun. Fast camera revealed a strongly boiling outlet of an open water circuit. Even more, shape-optimized water injector, when thermovision indirectly indicated that most liquid changes phase into steam, the STEAM survived for 1 minute under heat flux reaching 130 MW/m² — representing the most intensive sustained non-destructive heat shield test ever reported.

*This work has been carried out within the framework of the EUROfusion Consortium, funded by the European Union via the Euratom Research and Training Programme (Grant Agreement No. 101052200 — EUROfusion). The views and opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of the European Commission. Neither the European Union nor the European Commission is responsible for them. This work was also supported by the Czech Technology Agency (project TS01030051). We gratefully acknowledge the technical assistance of Niamh Clarke, Matěj Peterka, Michal Boušek. We thank Zdeněk Veselý and Matěj Hruška from the New Technologies Research Centre (University of West Bohemia, Pilsen) for helping to verify our heat flux measurement methodology using a 5 kW laser, and Jaromír Kopeček from the Institute of Physics for cutting the samples.

Publication: Manuscript just submitted

Presenters

  • Jan Horacek

    • Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

Authors

  • Jan Horacek

    • Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
  • Vaclav Sedmidubsky

    • Institute of Plasma Physics, Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Anna Horachek

    • Faculty of Nuclear Sciences, Czech Technical University
  • Jan Prevratil

    • Institute of Plasma Physics, Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Marek Janata

    • Institute of Plasma Physics, Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Zdenek Kutilek

    • Institute of Plasma Physics, Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Lukas Sedlacek

    • Institute of Plasma Physics, Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Maria Reji

    • University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign
  • Tomas Romsy

    • Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Czech Technical University
  • Pavel Zacha

    • Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Czech Technical University
  • Tomas Plechacek

    • Faculty of Nuclear Sciences, Czech Technical University
  • Slavomir Entler

    • Institute of Plasma Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Jan Hruby

    • Institute of Thermomechanics of the Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Jozef Kordik

    • Institute of Thermomechanics of the Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Vladimir Weinzettl

    • Institute of Plasma Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences