Last week an exceptional piece of equipment reached the premises of the ITER Organization.
In ITER, six cryopumps will be installed around the ITER vacuum vessel and two others in the cryostat. The main role of these massive pumps is to maintain ultra-high vacuum in the vacuum vessel and cryostat by trapping particles on their
charcoal-coated panels, and to extract the helium ash from the fusion reaction along with the "unburned" deuterium and tritium nuclei.
The
pre-production cryopump is the keystone of a technical development program that has been underway for approximately 10 years, and that has served to validate design and manufacturing processes and address all technical issues.
Technical Responsible Officer Matthias Dremel explains. "More than 15 high-technology companies in Europe were involved in its manufacturing, in close cooperation with the European Domestic Agency and specialists from the ITER Vacuum Section. The delivery signifies a great success for this collaboration."
The 3.4-metre-tall, 8 tonne pump received on 22 August was built by a consortium formed by the German company Research Instruments and the French company Alsyom. The component will now receive further instrumentation and undergo operational mechanical testing at ITER before it is shipped back to Germany—this time to the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT).