Abstract

To satisfy the wide-range requirement for the fission chamber-based neutron flux monitoring (NFM) system on experimental advanced superconducting tokamak (EAST), the pulse-counting and Campbell modes were combined to expand the measurement range. However, to obtain the neutron yields, the results of the Campbell mode should first be converted into neutron count rates via linear calibration. During the plasma experiment, the non-neutron backgrounds vary with respect to different experimental conditions, which leads to a baseline dynamic change in the Campbell mode. In future research, NFM system need provide real-time feedback parameters regarding the operational status of the fusion device. Therefore, an automatic calibration method was developed to automatically deduct various baselines of the Campbell mode and obtain the neutron yields in real time. This method continuously updates the average value of each sub-interval (multiple sub-intervals are set in the calibration region) using a linear superposition averaging method. In addition, to optimize the dual-mode switching threshold, ensure the calibration region and define the upper limit of Campbell mode, a simulated neutron signal generator was designed and applied. The switching threshold of the dual modes was set to 400 kcps, the calibration region of the Campbell mode was selected as 50–500 kcps, and the upper limit of the equivalent count rate in the Campbell mode reached to 108cps with a relative error of<4%. Finally, the automatic calibration method was tested using experimental data from the NFM system on EAST. The automatic calibration results basically overlapped with the reference results and superior to the offline fixed calibration results. Under different experimental conditions, the relative root mean square error (RRMSE) values of the automatic calibration results were lower than those of the offline fixed calibration results. Therefore, the proposed automatic calibration method is accurate and reliable, and can satisfy the real-time measurement requirements of wide-range NFM system.

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