The European DEMO will make use of a significant additional heating power, which could be partly provided by Neutral Beam Injectors (NBI), which accelerate negative ions by means of grids placed at increasing potentials. These grids will be fed by the Acceleration Grid Power Supply (AGPS), divided in a number of stages, which has to provide an overall dc voltage down to -1 MV and currents in the order of tens of Amperes. The AGPS will have to satisfy a set of static and dynamic requirements, in terms of ripple, accuracy, rise time and so on. In addition, during the NBI operation, frequent losses of insulation between the grids are expected, with consequent arc discharges, called breakdowns. The AGPS will be able to handle such events by nullifying the output currents as fast as possible in order to limit the energy discharged onto the grids. Adopting the Modular Multilevel Converter (MMC) technology for the AGPS of DEMO and future tokamaks seems promising, due to its intrinsic properties of modularity, high efficiency, fast dynamic response and small energy transferred to the arc in case of breakdown. One of the main drawbacks of this technology is the large volume occupied by the converter, which is air-insulated. This can be partly reduced by adopting alternative MMC schemes, to minimize the number of components and optimize the counter-voltage applied at breakdown. In this paper, alternative topologies for the MMC submodules or combinations of different schemes (full-bridge, half-bridge) are investigated. After a preliminary design of the converter, the results of numerical simulations carried out with circuit models are shown, with control schemes customized for the NBI operation. The performance of the different solutions in steady-state, dynamic and anomalous conditions are discussed, with particular focus on breakdown events. Finally, thermal analyses on the converter are carried out, to verify whether natural convection of air can be a suitable cooling method for the power components.

Studies on alternative schemes for the MMC-based Acceleration Grid Power Supply of DEMO Neutral Beam Injector

Gaio E
2021

Abstract

The European DEMO will make use of a significant additional heating power, which could be partly provided by Neutral Beam Injectors (NBI), which accelerate negative ions by means of grids placed at increasing potentials. These grids will be fed by the Acceleration Grid Power Supply (AGPS), divided in a number of stages, which has to provide an overall dc voltage down to -1 MV and currents in the order of tens of Amperes. The AGPS will have to satisfy a set of static and dynamic requirements, in terms of ripple, accuracy, rise time and so on. In addition, during the NBI operation, frequent losses of insulation between the grids are expected, with consequent arc discharges, called breakdowns. The AGPS will be able to handle such events by nullifying the output currents as fast as possible in order to limit the energy discharged onto the grids. Adopting the Modular Multilevel Converter (MMC) technology for the AGPS of DEMO and future tokamaks seems promising, due to its intrinsic properties of modularity, high efficiency, fast dynamic response and small energy transferred to the arc in case of breakdown. One of the main drawbacks of this technology is the large volume occupied by the converter, which is air-insulated. This can be partly reduced by adopting alternative MMC schemes, to minimize the number of components and optimize the counter-voltage applied at breakdown. In this paper, alternative topologies for the MMC submodules or combinations of different schemes (full-bridge, half-bridge) are investigated. After a preliminary design of the converter, the results of numerical simulations carried out with circuit models are shown, with control schemes customized for the NBI operation. The performance of the different solutions in steady-state, dynamic and anomalous conditions are discussed, with particular focus on breakdown events. Finally, thermal analyses on the converter are carried out, to verify whether natural convection of air can be a suitable cooling method for the power components.
2021
Istituto per la Scienza e Tecnologia dei Plasmi - ISTP
MMC-based Acceleration Grid Power Supply
DEMO
Neutral Beam Injector
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/442481
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