The Large Helical Device (LHD) started the deuterium plasma experiment on March 7, 2017. Approximately 6.4 GBq of tritium was produced in the first deuterium plasma experiment campaign and were utilized as tracers for the investigation of release behavior and the balance of tritium in the LHD vacuum vessel. To determine the tritium balance in LHD, the tritium release from the vacuum vessel was continually observed during the plasma experiment period and the vacuum vessel maintenance activities. The tritium exhaust rate was approximately 32.8% at the end of the plasma experiment. After the plasma experiment, the vacuum vessel was ventilated by room air for the maintenance activity and the tritium release from the in-vessel components was observed. The tritium release rate gradually decreased and became constant after four-month in spite of water vapor concentration. It is suggested that the tritium release mechanism from the vacuum vessel is a diffusion-limited process from the bulk. The tritium release amount during the maintenance activity for one year was approximately 5.0%. Considering the decrease of tritium decay for 1.5 years, tritium inventory in LHD was estimated to be approximately 3.66 GBq (57.2%) at the end of maintenance activity.
The deuterium plasma experiment was started using the Large Helical Device (LHD) at the National Institute for Fusion Science (NIFS) in March 2017 to investigate high-temperature plasma physics and the hydrogen isotope effects towards the realization of fusion energy. In order to clarify any experimental impacts on precipitation, precipitation has been collected at the NIFS site since November 2013 as a means to assess the relationship between isotope composition and chemical species in precipitation containing tritium. The tritium concentration ranged from 0.10 to 0.61 Bq L−1 and was high in spring and low in summer. The stable isotope composition and the chemical species were unchanged before and after the deuterium plasma experiment. Additionally, the tritium concentration after starting the deuterium plasma experiment was within three sigma of the average tritium concentration before the deuterium plasma experiment. These results suggested that there was no impact by tritium on the environment surrounding the fusion test facility.
In the deuterium plasma experiment using Large Helical Device at the National Institute for Fusion Science (NIFS), a small amount of tritium is produced by the D–D fusion reaction. Then, a part of produced tritium is discharged into the environment via a stack. Thus, the atmospheric tritium in the site of NIFS has been monitored before starting the deuterium plasma experiment. The atmospheric tritium concentrations at NIFS were indicated to be background levels in Japan. To investigate the impact of tritium discharged from the stack, the correlation between the atmospheric tritium concentration and the tritium concentration observed in the stack was evaluated, and no significant correlation was found. In addition, the atmospheric tritium concentration at NIFS ranged within the background levels in Japan. Therefore, the impact of discharged tritium from the stack would be negligible in the environment at NIFS.
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