Masahito Moriyama, Japan's Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, and Gilberto Pichetto Fratin, Italy's Minister of Environment and Energy Security, will attend the ceremony with officials from other ITER members.
Nineteen gigantic toroidal field coils have been delivered to southern France. They will be key components in ITER, the experimental fusion mega-project that will use magnetic confinement to imitate the process that powers the Sun and stars and gives Earth light and warmth.
Fusion research is aimed at developing a safe, abundant, and environmentally-responsible energy source.
ITER is a collaboration of more than 30 partner countries: the European Union, China, India, Japan, Korea, Russia and the United States. Most of ITER's funding is in the form of contributed components. This arrangement drives companies like Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, ASG Superconductors, Toshiba Energy Systems, SIMIC, CNIM, and many more to expand their expertise in the cutting-edge technologies needed for fusion.
The D-shaped toroidal field coils will be placed around the ITER vacuum vessel, a donut-shaped chamber called a tokamak. Inside the vessel, light atomic nuclei will be fused together to form heavier ones, releasing enormous energy from the fusion reaction.
The fuel for this fusion reaction is two forms of hydrogen, deuterium and tritium (DT). This fuel will be injected as a gas into the tokamak. By running an electrical current through the gas, it becomes an ionized plasma the fourth state of matter, a cloud of nuclei and electrons.
The plasma will be heated to 150 million degrees, 10 times hotter than the core of the sun. At this temperature, the velocity of the light atomic nuclei is high enough for them to collide and fuse. To shape, confine, and control this extremely hot plasma, the ITER tokamak must generate an invisible magnetic cage, precisely conformed to the shape of the metal vacuum vessel.
ITER uses niobium-tin and niobium-titanium as the material for its giant coils. When energized with electricity, the coils become electromagnets. When cooled with liquid helium to -269 degrees Celsius (4 Kelvin), they become superconducting.
To create the precise magnetic fields required, ITER employs three different arrays of magnets. The eighteen D-shaped toroidal field magnets confine the plasma inside the vessel. The poloidal field magnets, a stacked set of six rings that circle the tokamak horizontally, control the position and shape of the plasma.
At the center of the tokamak, the cylindrical central solenoid uses a pulse of energy to generate a powerful current in the plasma. At 15 million amperes, ITER's plasma current will be far more powerful than anything possible in current or previous tokamaks.
Ten coils were manufactured in Europe, under the auspices of ITER's European Domestic Agency, Fusion for Energy (F4E). Eight coils plus one spare were made in Japan, managed by ITER Japan, part of the National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology (QST).
Each completed coil is huge: 17 meters tall and 9 meters across, and weighing about 360 tons.
The toroidal field coils will operate together, in effect, as a single magnet: the most powerful magnet ever made.
They will generate a total magnetic energy of 41 gigajoules. ITER's magnetic field will be about 250,000 times stronger than that of the Earth.
Making the Toroidal Field Coils
The fabrication process began with production of niobium-tin strand. More than 87,000 kilometres of thin wire was needed to create 19 toroidal field coils. This strand was produced in China, Europe, Japan, Korea, Russia, and the United States.
Hundreds of niobium-tin strands were wound with copper strands into a rope-like cluster, and inserted into a steel jacket, with a central channel to accommodate the forced flow of liquid helium.
The result a "cable-in-conduit," or simply "conductor" forms the core element of the coils. This conductor material was shipped to Japan and Europe to begin the fabrication process.
The actual fabrication was even more challenging. To start, about 750 metres of conductor was bent into a double-spiral trajectory and heat-treated at 650 degrees Celsius. It was then fitted precisely into a D-shaped "radial plate," a stainless steel structure with grooves on both sides into which the conductor nestles.
The conductor was wrapped and insulated using glass and Kapton tape. Cover plates were fitted and laser-welded. This created a "double pancake," a huge but delicate sub-component made of two layers of conductor. The whole double pancake was then wrapped again in insulating tape and injected with resin to add structural strength, using vacuum to remove any air pockets. In the next stage, seven double pancakes were stacked to make a "winding pack," forming the core of the eventual magnet. Each double pancake was joined to the next for electrical continuity. The overall winding pack was insulated, heat treated, and again injected with resin.
Lastly, the winding pack was inserted into a massive, fit-for-purpose stainless steel case, weighing about 200 tonnes, strong enough to resist the immense forces that will be generated during ITER operation.
How much power will the ITER Tokamak provide?
The plant at ITER will produce about 500 megawatts of thermal power. If operated continuously and connected to the electric grid, that would translate to about 200 megawatts of electric power, enough for about 200,000 homes.
A commercial fusion plant will be designed with a slightly larger plasma chamber, for 10-15 times more electrical power. A 2,000 megawatt fusion power plant, for example, would supply electricity for 2 million homes.
Fusion power plants are carbon-free; they release no CO2.
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