Model C stellarator

Model C stellarator
Device typeStellarator
LocationPrinceton, New Jersey, United States
AffiliationPrinceton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Technical specifications
Minor radius5–7.5 cm (2.0–3.0 in)
Magnetic field3.5 T (35,000 G)
History
Date(s) of construction1961
Year(s) of operation1962–1969
Preceded byModel A/B stellarators[1]
Succeeded bySymmetric Tokamak (ST)

The Model C stellarator was the first large-scale stellarator to be built, during the early stages of fusion power research. Planned since 1952, construction began in 1961 at what is today the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL).[1] The Model C followed the table-top sized Model A, and a series of Model B machines that refined the stellarator concept and provided the basis for the Model C, which intended to reach break-even conditions. Model C ultimately failed to reach this goal, producing electron temperatures of 400 eV when about 100,000 were needed. In 1969, after UK researchers confirmed that the USSR's T-3 tokamak was reaching 1000 eV, the Model C was converted to the Symmetrical Tokamak, and stellarator development at PPPL ended.

  1. ^ a b Stix, T. H. (1998). "Highlights in early stellarator research at Princeton" (PDF). J. Plasma Fusion Res. 1: 3–8.