scholarly journals Monitoring and Hardware Management for Critical Fusion Plasma Instrumentation

2018 ◽  
Vol 170 ◽  
pp. 02002
Author(s):  
Paulo F. Carvalho ◽  
Bruno Santos ◽  
Miguel Correia ◽  
Álvaro M. Combo ◽  
AntÓnio P. Rodrigues ◽  
...  

Controlled nuclear fusion aims to obtain energy by particles collision confined inside a nuclear reactor (Tokamak). These ionized particles, heavier isotopes of hydrogen, are the main elements inside of plasma that is kept at high temperatures (millions of Celsius degrees). Due to high temperatures and magnetic confinement, plasma is exposed to several sources of instabilities which require a set of procedures by the control and data acquisition systems throughout fusion experiments processes. Control and data acquisition systems often used in nuclear fusion experiments are based on the Advanced Telecommunication Computer Architecture (AdvancedTCA®) standard introduced by the Peripheral Component Interconnect Industrial Manufacturers Group (PICMG®), to meet the demands of telecommunications that require large amount of data (TB) transportation at high transfer rates (Gb/s), to ensure high availability including features such as reliability, serviceability and redundancy. For efficient plasma control, systems are required to collect large amounts of data, process it, store for later analysis, make critical decisions in real time and provide status reports either from the experience itself or the electronic instrumentation involved. Moreover, systems should also ensure the correct handling of detected anomalies and identified faults, notify the system operator of occurred events, decisions taken to acknowledge and implemented changes. Therefore, for everything to work in compliance with specifications it is required that the instrumentation includes hardware management and monitoring mechanisms for both hardware and software. These mechanisms should check the system status by reading sensors, manage events, update inventory databases with hardware system components in use and maintenance, store collected information, update firmware and installed software modules, configure and handle alarms to detect possible system failures and prevent emergency scenarios occurrences. The goal is to ensure high availability of the system and provide safety operation, experiment security and data validation for the fusion experiment. This work aims to contribute to the joint effort of the IPFN control and data acquisition group to develop a hardware management and monitoring application for control and data acquisition instrumentation especially designed for large scale tokamaks like ITER.

2012 ◽  
Vol 87 (12) ◽  
pp. 2131-2135 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.J.N. Batista ◽  
C. Leong ◽  
V. Bexiga ◽  
A.P. Rodrigues ◽  
A. Combo ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 368-373 ◽  
pp. 959-962
Author(s):  
Yong Zhi Wang ◽  
Xiao Ming Yuan ◽  
Rui Sun

By special advantages and progress of dynamic centrifugal model tests, construction and development of large scale centrifugal shakers are driven. As one subsystem of a large scale centrifugal shaker, the testing auxiliary system is used to data acquisition, image acquisition and model making. The perfect design and construction of a testing auxiliary system must give a guarantee for dynamic centrifugal model tests. This paper outlines the components and function of the testing auxiliary system of a large scale centrifugal shaker. The basic design requirements and critical techniques relevant to data acquisition systems, image acquisition systems and containers are analyzed according to the characteristics of dynamic centrifugal model tests on a large scale centrifugal shaker, meanwhile, some specific conception and design suggestions are proposed. The results can offer some references for design of the testing auxiliary system of a large scale centrifugal shaker.


2013 ◽  
Vol 88 (6-8) ◽  
pp. 1332-1337 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.J.N. Batista ◽  
C. Leong ◽  
V. Bexiga ◽  
A.P. Rodrigues ◽  
A. Combo ◽  
...  

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