Since the 2018 IAEA-FEC conference, in addition to expanding the parameter horizons of the ADITYA-U machine, emphasis has been given to dedicated experiments on inductively driven particle injection (IPI) for disruption studies, runaway electron (RE) dynamics and mitigation, plasma rotation reversal, radiative-improved modes using Ne and Ar injection, modulation of magneto–hydrodynamic modes, edge turbulence using periodic gas puffs and electrode biasing (E-B). Plasma parameters close to the design parameters of circular plasmas with H2 and D2 as fuel have been realized, and the shaped plasma operation has also been initiated. Consistent plasma discharges having I P ∼ 100–210 kA, t ∼ 300–400 ms, n e ∼ 3–6 × 1019 m−3, core T e ∼ 300–500 eV were achieved with a maximum B T of ∼1.5 T. The enhanced plasma parameters are the outcome of repeated cycles of baking (135 °C), followed by extensive wall conditioning, which includes pulsed glow discharge cleaning in H, He and Ar–H mixture, and lithiumization. A higher confinement time has been observed in D2 compared to H2 plasmas. Furthermore, shaped plasmas are attempted for the first time in ADITYA-U. A first of its kind inductively driven particle injection for disruption mitigation studies has been developed and operated. The injection of solid particles into the plasma core leads to a fast current quench. Two pulses of electron cyclotron resonance wave at 42 GHz are launched in a single discharge: one pulse is used for pre-ionization and the second for heating. In a novel approach, a positively biased electrode is used to confine REs after discharge termination. E-B is also used for controlling the rotation of drift-tearing modes by changing the plasma rotation. Cold pulse propagation and signatures of detachment are observed during the injection of short gas puffs. A correlation between the plasma toroidal rotation and the total radiated power has been observed with neon gas injection-induced improved confinement modes.
An 8-channel E-band heterodyne radiometer system (74-86 GHz) is designed, characterized, and calibrated to measure the radial electron temperature profile by measuring Electron Cyclotron Emission spectrum at SST-1 Tokamak. The developed radiometer has a noise equivalent temperature of 1 eV and sensitivity of 5 × 10(9) V/W. In order to precisely measure the absolute value of electron temperature, a calibration measurement of the radiometer system is performed using hot-cold Dicke switch method, which confirms the system linearity.
A steady state superconducting tokamak (SST-1) has been commissioned after the successful experimental and engineering validations of its critical sub-systems. During the 'engineering validation phase' of SST-1; the cryostat was demonstrated to be leak-tight in all operational scenarios, 80 K thermal shields were demonstrated to be uniformly cooled without regions of 'thermal runaway and hot spots', the superconducting toroidal field magnets were demonstrated to be cooled to their nominal operational conditions and charged up to 1.5 T of the field at the major radius. The engineering validations further demonstrated the assembled SST-1 machine shell to be a graded, stress-strain optimized and distributed thermo-mechanical device, apart from the integrated vacuum vessel being validated to be UHV compatible etc. Subsequently, 'field error components' in SST-1 were measured to be acceptable towards plasma discharges. A successful breakdown in SST-1 was obtained in SST-1 in June 2013 assisted with electron cyclotron pre-ionization in the second harmonic mode, thus marking the 'first plasma' in SST-1 and the arrival of SST-1 into the league of contemporary steady state devices.Subsequent to the first plasma, successful repeatable plasma start-ups with E ∼ 0.4 V m −1 , and plasma current in excess of 70 kA for 400 ms assisted with electron cyclotron heating pre-ionization at a field of 1.5 T have so far been achieved in SST-1. Lengthening the plasma pulse duration with lower hybrid current drive, confinement and transport in SST-1 plasmas and magnetohydrodynamic activities typical to large aspect ratio SST-1 discharges are presently being investigated in SST-1. In parallel, SST-1 has uniquely demonstrated reliable cryo-stable high field operation of superconducting TF magnets in the two-phase cooling mode, operation of vapour-cooled current leads with cold gas instead of liquid helium and an order less dc joint resistance in superconducting magnet winding packs with high transport currents. In parallel, SST-1 is also continually getting up-graded with first wall integration, superconducting central solenoid installation and over-loaded MgB 2 -brass based current leads etc. Phase-1 of SST-1 up-gradation is scheduled by the first half of 2015, after which long pulse plasma experiments in both circular and elongated configurations have been planned in SST-1.
This paper reports the design, development and characterization of a broadband, polarization insensitive metasurface absorber in planar, cylindrically bent and 90° dihedral surface geometry. Four metallic patches loaded with eight lumped resistors are used, which has been optimized numerically using CST MICROWAVE STUDIO, as a unit cell of developed metasurface absorber, to achieve 20 dB reflection reduction for 51.21% fractional bandwidth (13.42–22.66 GHz) under normal incidence with 0.12 $${\lambda }_{L}$$ λ L thickness (where $${\lambda }_{L}$$ λ L corresponds to lower operating frequency). The numerical findings are also verified analytically using equivalent circuit analysis, which exhibits very good agreement. Polarization-insensitive characteristics are achieved using fourfold rotation symmetry of the designed structure. The fabricated prototype of the designed absorber is experimentally characterized, using free space measurement method and ABmm vector network analyzer (VNA) system, and fairly good agreement with numerical-analytical findings are reported. The major novelty of this study is the design and development of a broadband (13.42–22.66 GHz), polarization insensitive metasurface absorber that provides 20 dB reflection reduction numerically as well as experimentally in the whole band, which to the author’s knowledge has not been observed till now. Also, keeping in mind the radar stealth applications, first time we have demonstrated both numerically and experimentally, different geometrical shapes of conformal metasurfaces that can be practically used in actual scenario.
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