Calibration techniques for Thomson scattering diagnostics on large fusion experiments

Larger fusion experiments require long beam paths for laser diagnostics, which requires mechanical stability and measures to deal with remaining alignment variations. At the same time, due to technical and organizational boundary conditions, calibrations become challenging. The current mid-sized exp...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inReview of scientific instruments Vol. 95; no. 8
Main Authors Fuchert, G., Wagner, J., Henschke, L. V., Pasch, E., Beurskens, M. N. A., Bozhenkov, S. A., Brunner, K. J., Chen, S., Frank, J. M., Hirsch, M., Knauer, J., Wolf, R. C.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.08.2024
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Summary:Larger fusion experiments require long beam paths for laser diagnostics, which requires mechanical stability and measures to deal with remaining alignment variations. At the same time, due to technical and organizational boundary conditions, calibrations become challenging. The current mid-sized experiments face the same issues, yet on a smaller scale, which makes them ideal testing environments for novel calibration methods, since a comparison with the established best practices is still possible. At the stellarator Wendelstein 7-X, the calibration and operation of the Thomson scattering diagnostic is hampered by beam displacements, coating of windows during operation, and access restrictions while the superconducting coils are active. New calibration techniques were developed to improve the profile quality and reduce calibration time. While positional variations of the laser beam have to be minimized, the remaining displacements can be accounted for during the absolute calibration. An in situ spectral calibration has been developed based on Rayleigh scattering, which calibrates the whole diagnostic, including observation windows. In addition, a less accurate but faster method has been developed, which utilizes stray-light of a tunable OPO to perform spectral calibration within minutes and does not require torus hall access. Finally, a workflow has been established to consider finite linewidths of the calibration source in the spectral calibration. While these methods will be used at W7-X to complement existing calibration techniques, they may also solve some of the aforementioned issues expected for even larger and nuclear experiments, where access restrictions are stringent and calibration becomes even more demanding.
ISSN:0034-6748
1089-7623
DOI:10.1063/5.0219161