HL-2M

HL-2M
Huan-Liuqi-2M
CAD drawing of HL-2M
Device typeTokamak
LocationChengdu, Sichuan, China
AffiliationChina National Nuclear Corporation, Southwestern Institute of Physics
Technical specifications
Major radius1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Minor radius0.65 m (2 ft 2 in)
Magnetic field2.2 T (22,000 G)
Heating power25 MW
Discharge duration10 s
Plasma current3 MA
Plasma temperature200×106 K
History
Year(s) of operation2020–present
Preceded byHL-2A

HL-2M is a research tokamak at the Southwestern Institute of Physics in Chengdu, China. It was completed on November 26, 2019 and commissioned on December 4, 2020. HL-2M is now used for nuclear fusion research, in particular to study heat extraction from the plasma.[1][2] With a major radius of 1.78 m, the tokamak is a medium-scale device. The magnetic field of up to 2.2 T is created by non-superconducting copper coils.

References

  1. ^ "China turns on nuclear-powered 'artificial sun' (Update)". phys.org. 2020-12-04.
  2. ^ "HL-2M". 2017-11-17.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Fusion power, processes and devices
Core topicsProcesses,
methods
Confinement
type
Gravitational
Magnetic
Inertial
Electrostatic
Other forms
Devices,
experiments
Magnetic
confinement
Tokamak
International
Americas
Asia,
Oceania
Europe
Stellarator
Americas
Asia,
Oceania
Europe
RFP
Magnetized target
Other
Inertial
confinement
Laser
Americas
Asia
Europe
Non-laser
Applications
  • v
  • t
  • e
Operating power plants
Power plants under construction
Fujian
Xiapu
Zhangzhou
Guangdong
Lianjiang
Lufeng
Taipingling
Liaoning
Xudabao
Zheijiang
Jinqimen
San'ao
Planned power plants
Guangxi
Bailong
Hebei
Haixing
Hubei
Xianning
Hunan
Taohuajiang
Jiangsu
Lianyungang
Jiangxi
Pengze
Shandong
Zhaoyuan
Proposed power plants
Anhui
Jiyang
Wuhu
Chongqing
Fuling
Fujian
Xiapu
Guangdong
Shaoguan
Guangxi
Pingnan
Hebei
Cangzhou
Henan
Nanyang
Xinyang
Hunan
Changde
Xiaomoshan
Jiangxi
Yingtan
Ningdu
Yanjiashan
Jilin
Jingyu
Liaoning
Donggang
Sichuan
Nanchong
Research, experimental
and prototype reactors
Commercial reactor designs
Organizations
Power plant operators
Construction companies
  • China Nuclear Engineering & Construction Corporation
  • State Nuclear Power Engineering Corporation
Government agencies
Mining
Other
Related categories
  • Nuclear energy in China
  • Nuclear power stations in China
  • Nuclear technology in China


Stub icon

This plasma physics–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e