ITER-relevant calibration technique for soft x-ray spectrometer

The ITER-oriented JET research program brings new requirements for the low-Z impurity monitoring, in particular for the Be—the future main wall component of JET and ITER. Monitoring based on Bragg spectroscopy requires an absolute sensitivity calibration, which is challenging for large tokamaks. Thi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inReview of scientific instruments Vol. 81; no. 10; p. 10E315
Main Authors Rzadkiewicz, J, Książek, I, Zastrow, K-D, Coffey, I H, Jakubowska, K, Lawson, K D
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.10.2010
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Summary:The ITER-oriented JET research program brings new requirements for the low-Z impurity monitoring, in particular for the Be—the future main wall component of JET and ITER. Monitoring based on Bragg spectroscopy requires an absolute sensitivity calibration, which is challenging for large tokamaks. This paper describes both “component-by-component” and “continua” calibration methods used for the Be IV channel (75.9 Å) of the Bragg rotor spectrometer deployed on JET. The calibration techniques presented here rely on multiorder reflectivity calculations and measurements of continuum radiation emitted from helium plasmas. These offer excellent conditions for the absolute photon flux calibration due to their low level of impurities. It was found that the component-by-component method gives results that are four times higher than those obtained by means of the continua method. A better understanding of this discrepancy requires further investigations.
ISSN:1089-7623
DOI:10.1063/1.3502318