NPRE 421

Engineering at Illinois Engineering at Illinois

NPRE 421

COURSE OUTLINE

Course Number: NPRE 421/ECE421/PHYS479

Title: Plasma and Fusion Science

Catalogue Description: Provides an introduction to the physics of plasmas, including particle and fluid descriptions, waves, collisions, stability, and confinement, with applications to controlled thermonuclear fusion rectors, problems in fusion engineering, and astrophysics. Same as ECE 421 and PHYS 479. For engineering or physical science majors with junior standing.

Course Topics and Hours
Principle Topics Covered Hours (Approximate)
Introduction 1
Future energy needs and fusion's role
 
Relation to astrophyics
 
Basic Plasma Physics 6
Maxwell's equations
 
Debye length
 
Plasma parameter
 
Plasma sheaths
 
Conversation laws
 
Plasmas as fluids
 
Kinetic descriptions and distribution functions
 
Waves in Plasmas
 
Plasma oscillations
 
Electron plasma waves
 
Sound waves
 
Ion waves
 
Electromagnetic waves in plasmas
 
Hydromagnetic waves
 
Landau damping
 
Light-plasmas wave interactions
 
Collisions and Transport 5
Ionization/excitation/charge exchange
 
Reaction rates and cross-sections
 
Charged particle scattering
 
Radiation emission
 
Diffusion and resistivity
 
Diffusion current and confinement losses
 
Equilibrium and Stability 5
Ideal MHD
 
Stable and unstable equilibrium
 
Types of instabilities
 
Fluid instabilities
 
Two-stream instability
 
Normal mode analysis and minimum energy principle
 
Kruskal-Schwarzschild instability
 
Turbulence
 
Fusion Energy Balances 5
Particle and energy confinement time
 
Radiation losses
 
Fusion product slowing and heating
 
Particle and energy balance
 
Breakeven, Lawson criterion
 
Ignition criterion and burn physics
 
Spark ignition and burn propagation
 
Plasma Confinement Approaches 5
N-tau-T confinement plots
 
Open magnetic systems
 
Closed magnetic systems
 
Electrostatic systems
 
Inertial confinement
 
N-tau-T comparisons of approaches
 
Fusion Engineering 6
First wall, sputtering and cooling
 
Divertor physics/engineering
 
Blanket physics/engineering
 
Radiation damage and material activation
 
Heating, fueling and ash removal
 
Ash removal
 
Energy extraction and conversion
 
Plasma configuration and thermal instability control
 
Economics, safety and environmental considerations
 
Safety and environmental compatibility
 
Other Topics of Interest: to be selected from 4
Current fusion energy status: ITER, IEC's, NIF, etc.
 
Inertial fusion compression hydrodynamics
 
X-ray generation and indirect drive inertial fusion
 
Inertial fusion drivers: lasers and ion accelerators
 
Inertial fusion target technology
 
Multi-dimensional MHD - Grad-Shafranov Equation
 
Transport scaling approaches in magnetic systems
 
Fusion-fission hydrids
 
Kinetic theory
 
BGK and van Kampen modes
 
Nonlinear waves
 
Collisionless shock waves
 
Plasma turbulence
 
Astrophysical plasmas
 
Inertial fusion and laboratory astrophyics
 
Exams 2
Total 44

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Basic Texts:

Required:

  • "Principles of Fusion Energy", A.A. Harms, G.H. Miley, K.F. Schoepf and D.R. Kingdon. World Press, 2000, and/or "Introduction to Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion", 2nd Ed. F.F. Chen, Plenum Press, NY, 1984.
  • M.M. Elwakil "Nuclear Power Engineering"

Required:

  • "Plasma Physics for Nuclear Fusion", Kenro Mujamoto, MIT Press, 1989

Prerequisites:Engineering or physical science majors with junior standing.

Purpose of Course: The objective of this course is to provide a thorough introduction to the principles of high-temperature plasma physics and fusion systems. It is a central course for students in the Plasma and Fusion Science and Engineering option in Nuclear Engineering. Along with NPRE 423, "Plasma Laboratory" and NPRE 429, "Plasma Engineering," NPRE 421 forms the core of this option. It is also an important preparatory course for students majoring in physics who wish to pursue careers in space science or astrophysics. In addition, this course will serve graduate students in Nuclear Engineering who wish to pursue a fusion related thesis topic and graduate students in Physics and Astronomy who wish to pursue research in accretion physics, pulsars, the interstellar medium, or the intergalactic medium. It is a pre-requisite for the graduate-level Nuclear Engineering courses in fusion.

Instructor: George Miley

Credit: 3 Semester Hours or 3/4 Unit

Meeting hours per week: 3

Class registration opacity: 30

Semesters course offered: REFER TO MASTER LISTING

Other notes: There is no appreciable overlap with any other courses in Nuclear Engineering, Physics, or Electrical and Computer Engineering or with courses in other units.

Course last revised: May 2007

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