Abstract

Magnetic coils are indispensable for plasma position control in tokamaks. For ITER, non-inductive voltages generated under irradiation have to be reduced to well below 1 μV in order to support long pulse (3000 s) operation. In situ measurements of the differential voltage between the ends of two magnetic coils wound with mineral-insulated (MI) cable have been carried out at the JMTR fission reactor. The MI cables of the two magnetic coils had copper center conductor with diameter 0.5 and 0.8 mm, respectively, stainless steel outer sheath and MgO insulation. The measured differential voltage for the two MI cables increased with neutron fluence, reaching 4.5 and −0.7 μV in the two coils, at a fast neutron fluence of 1.26 × 10 23 n/m 2. The magnitude of the measured voltage can be explained by thermoelectric potentials, enabled mainly by non-uniform transmutation and displacement damages of the copper core of the cable.

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