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1 U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science Dr. Stephen Eckstrand Acting Director Research Division September 28, 2006 Overview of the Office of Fusion.

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Presentation on theme: "1 U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science Dr. Stephen Eckstrand Acting Director Research Division September 28, 2006 Overview of the Office of Fusion."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science Dr. Stephen Eckstrand Acting Director Research Division September 28, 2006 Overview of the Office of Fusion Energy Sciences www.science.doe.gov/ofes Fusion Power Associates Annual Meeting and Symposium

2 2 U.S. Fusion Energy Sciences Program Mission Answer the key scientific questions and overcome enormous technical challenges to harness the power that fuels a star, thereby enabling a landmark scientific achievement--bringing fusion power to the U.S. electric grid by the middle of this century. oEstablish the scientific and technological feasibility of fusion energy through the study of burning plasmas. oDevelop a fundamental understanding of plasma behavior sufficient to provide a reliable predictive capability for fusion energy systems. oDetermine the most promising approaches and configurations to confining hot plasmas for practical fusion energy systems. oDevelop the new materials, components, and technologies necessary to make fusion energy a reality.

3 3 OFES Management Transitions oAnne Davies (Associate Director for Fusion), John Willis (Director of Research Division), Michael Roberts (Director of ITER and International Division), and Warren Marton (U.S. ITER Program Manager) have retired during the past 18 months. oA new Associate Director is expected to be named soon. oDr. Jim Decker will remain Acting Associate Director until the new AD is officially on board. (Possibly December 2006) oErol Oktay, Gene Nardella, and Steve Eckstrand have shared (2 month rotation) the position of the Acting Director of Research Division since April 4, 2006. oErol Oktay has been the Acting Director of ITER and International Division since July 17.

4 4 Ten Year Goals for Fusion Energy Sciences* oPredictive Capability for Burning Plasma: Progress toward developing a predictive capability for key aspects of burning plasmas using advances in theory and simulation benchmarked against a comprehensive experimental database of stability, transport, wave- particle interaction, and edge effects (2015) oConfiguration Optimization: Progress toward demonstrating enhanced fundamental understanding of magnetic confinement and improved basis for future burning plasma experiments through research on magnetic confinement configuration optimization (2015) oHigh Energy Density Plasma Physics: Progress toward developing the fundamental understanding and predictability of high energy density plasma physics (2015) *FESAC is evaluating progress against these present goals, but these goals may be changed based on a long-range planning activity to be carried out under the leadership of the new Associate Director for Fusion Energy Sciences

5 5 Letter to FESAC Concerning the Charge to Examine Program Evolution oOriginal Charge February 27, 2006 –Examine program evolution over the coming decade –Identify goals, scope, deliverables, schedules, and time frames –Report due February 2007 oLetter From Dr. Orbach to FESAC Chair dated July 18, 2006 –Imminent signing of ITER agreement will affect fusion research for many years –“… it is extremely important that the new Associate Director for the Fusion Energy Sciences (FES) program have the opportunity to provide input on all … aspects of this activity…” –“ … we need to have a planning horizon that coincides with a significant part of [the ITER lifetime]. Therefore, I would suggest that the planning horizon be 20-25 rather than the ten-year period as asked for in the original charge letter.” –“With regard to the other aspects of this planning activity … I would like to wait until the new AD comes on board … before providing any other input. …I would strongly suggest that you delay any decision on the format of community input, such as a Snowmass-type meeting until further guidance is received,

6 6 FY 2006 Has Been a Year of Remarkable Progress oMajor progress on ITER agreement oSignificant Scientific Progress oImproving budget outlook as a result of the American Competitiveness Initiative

7 7 Fusion Energy Sciences Priorities oFully support ITER design and construction oContinue to develop burning plasma physics and technology and prepare for ITER operation oTake advantage of opportunities for collaboration on unique international facilities oConduct research to define facilities beyond ITER oContinue stewardship of plasma science

8 8 ITER Progress in FY 2006 U.S. ITER Project Accomplishments oCompletion of appointments of key management staff of the USIPO including Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) Managers responsible for the U.S. procurement allocations oRevision of project documentation (preliminary cost, schedule ranges, acquisition strategy, etc.) in preparation for project cost reviews oPlanning, interaction and coordination with the International ITER Organization on all project activities including the upcoming international design review, nomination of potential seconded staff urgently needed by the ITER Organization, determination and discussion about fulfillment of the FY2006/FY2007 task assignments oPlanning for and aggressive participation in specific seven-partner international technical and operational Working Group meetings (Summer through Fall). oCompleted first cash contributions made to the ITER organization on August 31, 2006, transferring $528,918 dollars or 409,000 euros.

9 9 Today’s Fusion Tokamaks Are Making Important Contributions to ITER Joint ITPA experiments on DIII-D, C-MOD, NSTX, the European tokamaks JET and ASDEX-UG, and the Japanese tokamak JT-60U are investigating the scaling of energy confinement time with plasma pressure in ITER relevant plasmas. DIII-D completed system upgrades and modifications in 2006 and began research in ITER-relevant low rotation regimes using balanced (co- and counter-current) neutral beam injection. Demonstrated that the threshold for rotational stabilization of the RWM using this method of slowing rotation is much lower than previously attained with magnetic braking techniques. Alcator C-Mod successfully demonstrated real-time disruption detection and mitigation at ITER-level densities with adaptive firing of its high-pressure gas jet system by computerized control. Dangerous halo currents were reduced by about half, and nearly all of the disrupting plasma’s energy was converted to relatively benign radiation. NSTX scientists used a set of six non-axisymmetric feedback coils and improved equilibrium coils to carry out studies of error field reduction, plasma rotation control, and active resistive wall mode control in high performance plasmas. They were able to control the resistive wall mode successfully at high normalized pressure at ITER relevant rotation for a plasma skin time.

10 10 Simulations with Gyrokinetic codes investigated the fundamental physics of turbulent transport in fusion plasmas and discovered important new effects such as turbulence spreading, highlighting the non-local nature of plasma transport FY 2006 Theory & Computation Highlights The Gyrokinetic Toroidal Code (GTC) achieved an unprecedented 7.2 teraflop sustained performance using 4096 processors and over 13 billion particles on the Earth Simulator Computer.

11 11 Education at the Fusion Science Centers The Center for Extreme States of Matter and Fast Ignition Physics 2005 summer school in high energy density physics at the University of California at Berkeley 96 undergraduate and graduate students, post docs, and research scientists attended a wide range of lectures on high energy density plasma physics Two dimensional PIC simulation of electron generation and transport in fast ignition. Artist’s conception of black hole accretion flow Multiscale plasma simulations (developed and used for magnetic confinement fusion research) also being used to predict turbulence and heating in black hole accretion disks The Center for Multiscale Plasma Dynamics and The Center for Magnetic Self-Organization 2006 winter school on the Physics of Magnetic Reconnection at UCLA Over 50 graduate students and post- docs attended six days of lectures Second winter school on Plasma Turbulence and Transport: Commonalities between Lab, Space and Astrophysics in January 2007

12 12 (FY 2007 $ in Millions) Fusion Energy Sciences Funding Fiscal Years 9/12/06 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 199519961997199819992000200120022003200420052007 Cong 2006 July Equipment Operating

13 13 FY 2008 Fusion Energy Sciences OMB Budget Request 154.2 121.6 43.2 319.0 FY 2007 Cong Science Facility Operations Enabling R&D OFES Total DIII-D C-Mod NSTX NCSX ITER Non-ITER 56.7 22.8 35.1 16.6 60.0 259.0 148.4 104.5 27.8 280.7 FY 2006 July 54.9 21.8 34.2 17.8 24.6 256.1 ($ Millions)

14 14 Fusion Energy Sciences ($ in thousands) FY 2007 Cong FY 2006 July AFP 56,662 22,831 35,118 16,597 60,000 258,950 54,892 21,772 34,220 17,770 24,609 256,074 DIII-D Alcator C-Mod NSTX NCSX ITER (Preparations, OPC & MIE) Non-ITER 318,950280,683Total Fusion Energy Sciences 43,18227,798 Enabling R&D Total 12,945 2,550 4,687 23,000 14,787 2,529 7,033 3,449 Engineering Research Plasma Technologies (MFE) Advanced Design & Analysis (MFE) Materials Research (MFE) Enabling R&D for ITER (OPC) 121,555 104,460Facility Operations Total 32,362 13,941 18,422 15,900 12/15/12/0 3,930 37,000 30,780 13,282 18,681 17,019 7/14/11 3,538 5,294 15,866 DIII-D Alcator C-Mod NSTX NCSX Facility Ops times in weeks GPP, GPE, Other ITER Preparations ITER MIE TEC Cost 154,213148,425Science Total 13,94114,189General Plasma Science 6,970 4,221Advanced Computing/SciDAC 24,85323,900Theory 56,30259,598Subtotal Alternates Research 16,696 19,990 11,949 6,970 697 15,539 21,390 15,473 6,445 751 NSTX Research Experimental Plasma Research HEDP MST Research NCSX Research 53,10045,564 Subtotal Tokamaks 24,300 8,890 5,064 3,854 3,730 7,262 24,112 8,490 4,951 3,763 4,248 0 DIII-D Research C-MOD Research International Collaborations Diagnostics Other SBIR/STTR (science) Science Facility Operation Enabling R&D FY 2007 Cong FY 2006 July AFP

15 15 FY 2007 Fusion Budget oCommittee recommendation for fusion energy sciences is $318,950,000, the same as the budget request. oCommittee is pleased that the Department requested sufficient funding for ITER “without doing so at the expense of domestic fusion research activities or at the expense of other office of science programs.” House Mark oCommittee recommends $307,001,000 for Fusion Energy Sciences and “recommends that a new office be created to consolidate and support research in high energy density physics.” oCommittee shifted $11,949,000 provided for High Energy Density Science to the new office within the Department of Energy. Senate Mark

16 16 FES FY 2007 Congressional Budget $319.0 M Tokamak $88.4 ITER $60.0 Alternates $90.6 Enabling R&D $20.2 Theory $23.9 SciDAC $7.0 GPS $14.0 Other $14.9 FES FY 2006 July Fin Plan Distribution $280.7 M Tokamak $85.4 ITER $24.6 Alternates $95.3 Enabling R&D $24.3 Theory $24.9 SciDAC $4.2 GPS $14.2 Other $7.8 Fusion Energy Sciences Budget ($ in Millions)

17 17 *NSF/NIST/NAS/AF/Undesignated funds Institution Types FY 2007 Request $319.0M Fusion Energy Sciences Funding Distribution Universities 23.2% Industry 19.3% Other* 2.4% Laboratory 55.0% Functions Science 46.1% Facility Operations + 26.5% Technology 6.3% SBIR/STTR 2.3% +Includes NCSX Project ITER Direct 18.8% 01/31/06

18 18 ITER MIE Funding for FY07 Total of $60.0M in FY07 Distribution of Funding Design/R&D/Mgmt $47.5M Magnet First wall shields Cooling water systems Roughing pump Pellet injector Exhaust Processing ICH transmission line ECH transmission line Diagnostics Project management Hardware Commitments $1.5M Toroidal field coil conductor Diagnostic Components Cash to IO $5.0M ITER Organization (IO) Employees and Secondees $6.0M 6 5 1.5 47.5

19 19 ITER Funding Profile Budget (dollars in thousands – in as spent dollars) *The estimated TPC is based on project completion in 2014. The international ITER Organization recently announced a schedule indicating a 2015 project completion and first plasma in 2016. The international and domestic project schedule will be more firm at CD-2, and the estimate remains preliminary until the baseline is established at CD-2. Fiscal YearTotal Estimated CostsOther Project CostsTotal Project Costs 200615,8663,44919,315 200737,00023,00060,000 2008149,50010,500160,000 2009208,5006,000214,500 2010208,500821209,321 2011181,9640 2012130,0000 2013116,9000 201430,0000 TOTAL1,078,23043,7701,122,000 *

20 20 FY 2007 Performance Targets oIn FY 2007, FES will measure and identify magnetic modes on NSTX that are driven by energetic ions traveling faster than the speed of magnetic perturbations (Alfvén speed); such modes are expected in burning plasmas such as ITER. Science Facility Operations oIn FY 2007, improve the simulation resolution of linear stability properties of Toroidal Alfvén Eigenmodes driven by energetic particles and neutral beams in ITER by increasing the number of toroidal modes used to 15. oAverage achieved operational time of major national fusion facilities as a percentage of total planned operational time is greater than 90%. oCost-weighted mean percent variance from established cost and schedule baselines for major construction, upgrade, or equipment procurement projects kept to less than 10%.


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