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AbstractAbstract
[en] A thermonuclear reactor can be considered to be a vacuum system in which constant concentration should be maintained of reacting particles while permanently discharging the undesirable particles using a system of pumps. The discharging proceeds in two stages: in the former, the reactor is degassed using external pumps connected to the reactor chamber through a pumping pipe. The latter in which hydrogen is admitted, uses high pump-rate machines based on the principle of the binding of the gas to the pump surface and must not introduce molecules of higher atomic mass in the system. Turbomolecular pumps of diffusion oil pumps are most suitable for the former stage while condensation, cryosorption, titanium pumping machines and special pumping methods are most suitable for the latter stage. Examples are shown of the pump system design for Tokamak 10 and for facilities at the Euratom laboratory in Fontenay-aux-Roses. (M.D.)
Original Title
Vakuove problemy konstrukce jadernych reaktoru
Primary Subject
Source
Paty, L. (ed.); Jednota Ceskoslovenskych Matematiku a Fyziku, Prague; 24 p; 1981; p. 63-69; Solar and thermonuclear energy sources; Stirin (Czechoslovakia); 10 - 12 May 1978
Record Type
Miscellaneous
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Conference
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