Short description: Physics laboratory at the University of Saskatchewan
The Plasma Physics Laboratory at the University of Saskatchewan was established in 1959 by H. M. Skarsgard. Early work centered on research with a Betatron.
Facilities
STOR-1M
STOR-1M is Canada's first tokamak built in 1983. In 1987 STOR-1M was the world’s first demonstration of alternating current in a tokamak.[1][2]
STOR-M
STOR-M| Saskatchewan Torus-Modified |
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| Device Type | Tokamak |
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| Location | Saskatchewan, Canada |
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| Affiliation | University of Saskatchewan |
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| Technical specifications |
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| Major Radius | 46 cm (18 in) |
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| Minor Radius | 12.5 cm (4.9 in) |
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| Magnetic field | 0.5–1 T (5,000–10,000 G) |
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| Plasma current | 30–60 kA |
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| History |
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| Year(s) of operation | 1987 – present |
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| Preceded by | STOR-1M |
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STOR-M stands for Saskatchewan Torus-Modified. STOR-M is a tokamak located at the University of Saskatchewan. STOR-M is a small tokamak (major radius = 46 cm, minor radius = 12.5 cm) designed for studying plasma heating, anomalous transport and developing novel tokamak operation modes and advanced diagnostics. STOR-M is capable of a 30–40 millisecond plasma discharge with a toroidal magnetic field of between 0.5 and 1 tesla and a plasma current of between 20 and 50 kiloamperes. STOR-M has also demonstrated improved confinement induced by a turbulent heating pulse, electrode biasing and compact torus injection.
References
- ↑ Mitarai, O.; Wolfe, S.W.; Hirose, A.; Skarsgard, H.M. (1987). "Stable AC tokamak discharges in the STOR-1M device". Nuclear Fusion 27 (4): 604. doi:10.1088/0029-5515/27/4/007. https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0029-5515/27/4/007/pdf. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
- ↑ Hua, Wang; Jiarong, Luo; Qiping, Yuan; Congdong, Xu (2007). "Study of the DEF Feedback Control System in AC Operation of Superconducting Tokamak". Plasma Science and Technology 9 (1): 106–109. doi:10.1088/1009-0630/9/1/21. Bibcode: 2007PlST....9..106W. https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1009-0630/9/1/21/meta.
External links
Fusion power, processes and devices |
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| Core topics |
- Nuclear fusion
- Timeline
- List of experiments
- Nuclear power
- Nuclear reactor
- Atomic nucleus
- Fusion energy gain factor
- Lawson criterion
- Magnetohydrodynamics
- Neutron
- Plasma
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Processes, methods | Confinement type | | Gravitational |
- Alpha process
- Triple-alpha process
- CNO cycle
- Fusor
- Helium flash
- Nova
- Proton-proton chain
- Carbon-burning
- Lithium burning
- Neon-burning
- Oxygen-burning
- Silicon-burning
- R-process
- S-process
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| Magnetic |
- Dense plasma focus
- Field-reversed configuration
- Levitated dipole
- Magnetic mirror
- Reversed field pinch
- Spheromak
- Stellarator
- Tokamak
- Z-pinch
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| Inertial |
- Bubble (acoustic)
- Laser-driven
- Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion
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| Electrostatic | |
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| Other forms |
- Magnetized target
- Migma
- Muon-catalyzed
- Pyroelectric
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Devices, experiments | Magnetic confinement | |
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Inertial confinement | |
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| Applications | |
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International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility |
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 | Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma Physics Laboratory (Saskatchewan). Read more |