Lawaranceville E-Newsletter
WB-8 has more numbers than FF-1, but FF-1 numbers are more clear, concise, and straightforward.
I am very happy with both! It's a race to boron burn, I can't think of another race that would make me happier.
On a side note, after the fusion energy revolution, we should all start another forum to address the next greatest issue facing humanity: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategies ... Senescence
(aging/growing old).
I am very happy with both! It's a race to boron burn, I can't think of another race that would make me happier.
On a side note, after the fusion energy revolution, we should all start another forum to address the next greatest issue facing humanity: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategies ... Senescence
(aging/growing old).
cleaning the chamber—advice welcomed!
Okay, they got a question for chemists and vacuum experts: how to easily clean the chamber.
If you know anything about it, please post your answer at http://focusfusion.org/index.php/forums/viewthread/952/ or add a comment here. Hopefully someone from LPP will look at it - or I'll point them to here.For the chemists out there, we have a few cleaning questions. On the one hand, we sometimes (including right now) get accidental contamination within the vacuum chamber with lubricating grease from machining that gets stuck in unseen places and is not totally cleaned before we get the pieces into the vacuum chamber. Is there any gas we could use that would clean up hydrocarbon deposits formed after the plasma interacts with the grease, which won’t harm our stainless steel vacuum chamber or our copper electrodes? If we could just have a cleaning gas, it would be much faster than opening up the chamber and taking everything apart.
Second, copper eroded from the anode gets deposited on our glass viewing windows. We can take these out easily enough but what is good to clean the copper off the glass that won’t scratch or harm the glass or the surrounding steel?
IR + UV lamps or Glow discharge with Argon.
See here:
http://www.vacuumlab.com/Articles/VacLab52.pdf
They could also contact directly the guys at vacuumlab.com for additional suggestions.
See here:
http://www.vacuumlab.com/Articles/VacLab52.pdf
They could also contact directly the guys at vacuumlab.com for additional suggestions.
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Re: cleaning the chamber—advice welcomed!
I know only well known thing.Henning wrote:Okay, they got a question for chemists and vacuum experts: how to easily clean the chamber.
If you know anything about it, please post your answer at http://focusfusion.org/index.php/forums/viewthread/952/ or add a comment here. Hopefully someone from LPP will look at it - or I'll point them to here.For the chemists out there, we have a few cleaning questions. On the one hand, we sometimes (including right now) get accidental contamination within the vacuum chamber with lubricating grease from machining that gets stuck in unseen places and is not totally cleaned before we get the pieces into the vacuum chamber. Is there any gas we could use that would clean up hydrocarbon deposits formed after the plasma interacts with the grease, which won’t harm our stainless steel vacuum chamber or our copper electrodes? If we could just have a cleaning gas, it would be much faster than opening up the chamber and taking everything apart.
Second, copper eroded from the anode gets deposited on our glass viewing windows. We can take these out easily enough but what is good to clean the copper off the glass that won’t scratch or harm the glass or the surrounding steel?
That first fusion experiments wall was made from glass. And plasma was contaminated with silicium, oxygen, etc.
Then when walls were made from stainless steel especially after some "trainings" (multiple heating-cooling cycles up to 300 deg) plasma contaminations has been dramatically decreased.
Re: cleaning the chamber—advice welcomed!
I don't know about plasma cleaning for the grease. I think they are just going to have to make sure that all of the parts are properly degreased prior to putting into the vacuum chamber. Ultrasonic bath in both acetone and IPA (two separate baths) can help with grease removal prior to putting into the vacuum chamber. At minimum, wipe everything clean with IPA before putting it in the chamber.Henning wrote:Okay, they got a question for chemists and vacuum experts: how to easily clean the chamber.
If you know anything about it, please post your answer at http://focusfusion.org/index.php/forums/viewthread/952/ or add a comment here. Hopefully someone from LPP will look at it - or I'll point them to here.For the chemists out there, we have a few cleaning questions. On the one hand, we sometimes (including right now) get accidental contamination within the vacuum chamber with lubricating grease from machining that gets stuck in unseen places and is not totally cleaned before we get the pieces into the vacuum chamber. Is there any gas we could use that would clean up hydrocarbon deposits formed after the plasma interacts with the grease, which won’t harm our stainless steel vacuum chamber or our copper electrodes? If we could just have a cleaning gas, it would be much faster than opening up the chamber and taking everything apart.
Second, copper eroded from the anode gets deposited on our glass viewing windows. We can take these out easily enough but what is good to clean the copper off the glass that won’t scratch or harm the glass or the surrounding steel?
As far as removal of the Copper from the chamber walls, a simple DC glow discharge with Ar or O2 should do the job. The glow discharge would be simple capacitive DC with the bias plate at 500 or 1000 V bias. The Ar or O2 gas flow should be at around 1-10 torr with a base pressure of 0.1 torr (need only a roughing pump).
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Re: cleaning the chamber—advice welcomed!
Change to sapphire windows and scratching during cleaning becomes less of a problem. 'Course the sapphire windows may be out-of-budget.Henning wrote:Second, copper eroded from the anode gets deposited on our glass viewing windows. We can take these out easily enough but what is good to clean the copper off the glass that won’t scratch or harm the glass or the surrounding steel?
Alternatively, treat the glass windows as replaceable items and don't bother cleaning them.
"Aqaba! By Land!" T. E. Lawrence
R. Peters
R. Peters
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Re: cleaning the chamber—advice welcomed!
The second thought I would propose is to disassemble device and to wash each metallic part in solvent. E.g. acetone.Henning wrote:Okay, they got a question for chemists and vacuum experts: how to easily clean the chamber.
If you know anything about it, please post your answer at http://focusfusion.org/index.php/forums/viewthread/952/ or add a comment here. Hopefully someone from LPP will look at it - or I'll point them to here.For the chemists out there, we have a few cleaning questions. On the one hand, we sometimes (including right now) get accidental contamination within the vacuum chamber with lubricating grease from machining that gets stuck in unseen places and is not totally cleaned before we get the pieces into the vacuum chamber. Is there any gas we could use that would clean up hydrocarbon deposits formed after the plasma interacts with the grease, which won’t harm our stainless steel vacuum chamber or our copper electrodes? If we could just have a cleaning gas, it would be much faster than opening up the chamber and taking everything apart.
Second, copper eroded from the anode gets deposited on our glass viewing windows. We can take these out easily enough but what is good to clean the copper off the glass that won’t scratch or harm the glass or the surrounding steel?
Then a few heating-cooling cycles for removal of absorbed on the surface contaminators. This is important.
From what insulator is made?
As I remember the word "Mylar". Hydrocarbon? Plastic? Or ceramic?
The best insulator material less contaminating plasma is Beryllium Oxide: good electric insulator, better thermal conductor than even aluminum (metal!), low atom number of beryllium and so, lower Bremsstahlung in case of erosion, etc. One disadvantage of beryllium and beryllium oxide that both they are toxic and require qualified working.
Also I do not quite understand. What is a problem with hydrocarbon contamination if that is caused by machining grease and if that may be removed after a few shots?
I see more significant problem. If they have problem of deterioration of transparency of observation window at the expense of copper deposition, won't that copper contaminate also plasma as well?
Why not as a last resort to try beryllium electrodes instead of copper?
Thanks everyone for your suggestions. If you have more, these are welcomed nevertheless.
I don't know exactly where this lubricating grease comes from. As they write it's somehow hidden in unseen places. More some kind of an accident.
That Mylar (boPET) is used in insulating the conducting aluminium sheets, from switches to the DPF. I don't know whether the base insulator of the electrodes are PET too, but I think they are. But it seems insulators aren't the problem here.
Beryllium is hard to machine, because of its toxicity. As long as we don't need to mess around with beryllium, that's a good thing. Now the experiments of testing several dimensioned DPFs are starting the next few weeks, for determining the optimum parameters for fusion. Electrodes will have to be replaced quite often, and copper is easier to handle than beryllium.
I don't know exactly where this lubricating grease comes from. As they write it's somehow hidden in unseen places. More some kind of an accident.
That Mylar (boPET) is used in insulating the conducting aluminium sheets, from switches to the DPF. I don't know whether the base insulator of the electrodes are PET too, but I think they are. But it seems insulators aren't the problem here.
Beryllium is hard to machine, because of its toxicity. As long as we don't need to mess around with beryllium, that's a good thing. Now the experiments of testing several dimensioned DPFs are starting the next few weeks, for determining the optimum parameters for fusion. Electrodes will have to be replaced quite often, and copper is easier to handle than beryllium.
Re: cleaning the chamber—advice welcomed!
Dismantling and soaking with acetone is going to be quite time consuming, and will need anyhow a post treatment after reassembling.kurt9 wrote:I don't know about plasma cleaning for the grease. I think they are just going to have to make sure that all of the parts are properly degreased prior to putting into the vacuum chamber. Ultrasonic bath in both acetone and IPA (two separate baths) can help with grease removal prior to putting into the vacuum chamber. At minimum, wipe everything clean with IPA before putting it in the chamber.
As far as removal of the Copper from the chamber walls, a simple DC glow discharge with Ar or O2 should do the job. The glow discharge would be simple capacitive DC with the bias plate at 500 or 1000 V bias. The Ar or O2 gas flow should be at around 1-10 torr with a base pressure of 0.1 torr (need only a roughing pump).
Probably the best could be a UV+IR lamp to break the long carbon chains in short one followed by an Argon glow discharge to remove the remains.
I heave heard that lately Ar-O2 mixtures glow discharge are giving quite interesting results, but I do not know enough to offer an advice on this.
Needless to say that the way the chamber is designed will make quite a difference in the results that will be obtained with a system or the other.
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I think that lubricating grease comes from machining from coolant liquid. As after machining the parts that should be clean obligatory should pass degreasing operation.Henning wrote:I don't know exactly where this lubricating grease comes from. As they write it's somehow hidden in unseen places. More some kind of an accident.
I don't know whether the base insulator of the electrodes are PET too, but I think they are. But it seems insulators aren't the problem here.
Beryllium is hard to machine, because of its toxicity. As long as we don't need to mess around with beryllium, that's a good thing. Now the experiments of testing several dimensioned DPFs are starting the next few weeks, for determining the optimum parameters for fusion. Electrodes will have to be replaced quite often, and copper is easier to handle than beryllium.
But also if they use plastic insulator I am not sure which one make more significant contribution in contamination: grease or eroded and dissociated insulator.
As contamination by grease will be lesser by each shot.
Yes, beryllium is harder machinable than copper. But we already see the problem with copper deposition on watching window. As I understand before deposition copper's particles should pass through plasma. Will they not contaminate plasma? Atom number of copper and beryllium? Which one will give less Bremsstahlung?
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Re: cleaning the chamber—advice welcomed!
Sorry if someone have no time.Giorgio wrote:Dismantling and soaking with acetone is going to be quite time consuming, and will need anyhow a post treatment after reassembling.
Are you sure that the grease is problem if insulator is made of hydrocarbons too?
What will do your mix Ar+O2 with plastic insulator? Will your ultraviolet lamp not act on insulator?
Can that insulator after UV radiation and O2 discharge withstand 45kV without breakdown?
Would the insulator changing process be not time consuming in case of breakdown?
Well, that's news. Does that mean you'll be introducing nitrogen soon?Henning wrote:Beryllium is hard to machine, because of its toxicity. As long as we don't need to mess around with beryllium, that's a good thing. Now the experiments of testing several dimensioned DPFs are starting the next few weeks, for determining the optimum parameters for fusion. Electrodes will have to be replaced quite often, and copper is easier to handle than beryllium.
Just an informational note: for the reasons given only copper electrodes will be used in the current experiment, but my understanding is that a production DPF reactor would use beryllium electrodes.
Temperature, density, confinement time: pick any two.