HIGH-POWER CORRUGATED WAVEGUIDE COMPONENTS FOR mm-wave FUSION HEATING SYSTEMS

Similar documents
HIGH-POWER CORRUGATED WAVEGUIDE COMPONENTS FOR mm-wave FUSION HEATING SYSTEMS

GA A22776 THE DESIGN AND PERFORMANCE OF WAVEGUIDE TRANSMISSION LINE COMPONENTS FOR PLASMA ELECTRON CYCLOTRON HEATING (ECH) SYSTEMS

INITIAL RESULTS FROM THE MULTI-MEGAWATT 110 GHz ECH SYSTEM FOR THE DIII D TOKAMAK

GA A26816 DESIGNS OF NEW COMPONENTS FOR ITER ECH&CD TRANSMISSION LINES

PERFORMANCE OF THE 110 GHz SYSTEM ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

GA A26150 PROGRESS ON DESIGN AND TESTING OF CORRUGATED WAVEGUIDE COMPONENTS SUITABLE FOR ITER ECH AND CD TRANSMISSION LINES

AN IN-LINE POWER MONITOR FOR HE11 LOW LOSS TRANSMISSION LINES

THE 110 GHz MICROWAVE HEATING SYSTEM ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

GA A25793 CW OPERATION OF CORRUGATED WAVEGUIDE TRANSMISSION LINES FOR ITER ECH AND CD SYSTEM

INFRARED MEASUREMENTS OF THE SYNTHETIC DIAMOND WINDOW OF A 110 GHz HIGH POWER GYROTRON

GA A24691 STATUS OF THE ELECTRON CYCLOTRON HEATING SYSTEM ON DIII D

THE MEASURED PERFORMANCE OF A 170 GHz REMOTE STEERING LAUNCHER

GA A22897 QUASI-OPTIC COMPONENTS IN OVERSIZED CORRUGATED WAVEGUIDE FOR MILLIMETER-WAVE TRANSMISSION SYSTEMS

GA A22963 RECENT DEVELOPMENTS ON THE HIGH POWER ECH INSTALLATION AT THE DIII D TOKAMAK

GA A25836 PRE-IONIZATION EXPERIMENTS IN THE DIII-D TOKAMAK USING X-MODE SECOND HARMONIC ELECTRON CYCLOTRON HEATING

INITIAL TESTS AND OPERATION OF A 110 GHz, 1 MW GYROTRON WITH EVACUATED WAVEGUIDE SYSTEM ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

A REGULATED POWER SUPPLY FOR THE FILAMENTS OF A HIGH POWER GYROTRON

Testing of ITER-Class ECH Transmission Line Components at the JAEA Radio-Frequency Test Stand

GA A22574 ADVANTAGES OF TRAVELING WAVE RESONANT ANTENNAS FOR FAST WAVE HEATING SYSTEMS

PRACTICAL EXPERIENCES WITH THE 6 GYROTRON SYSTEM ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

GA A24030 ECE RADIOMETER UPGRADE ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

GA A27238 MEASUREMENT OF DEUTERIUM ION TOROIDAL ROTATION AND COMPARISON TO NEOCLASSICAL THEORY IN THE DIII-D TOKAMAK

Development of the 170GHz gyrotron and equatorial launcher for ITER

US ITER Electron Cyclotron System White Paper

GA A22583 FAST WAVE ANTENNA ARRAY FEED CIRCUITS TOLERANT OF TIME-VARYING LOADING FOR DIII D

GA A22577 AN ELM-RESILIENT RF ARC DETECTION SYSTEM FOR DIII D BASED ON ELECTROMAGNETIC AND SOUND EMISSIONS FROM THE ARC

Estimation of the Loss in the ECH Transmission Lines for ITER

GA MICROWAVE WINDOW DEVELOPMENT

Measurements of edge density profile modifications during IBW on TFTR

GA A23281 EXTENDING DIII D NEUTRAL BEAM MODULATED OPERATIONS WITH A CAMAC BASED TOTAL ON TIME INTERLOCK

GA A SOLID-STATE HIGH VOLTAGE MODULATOR WITH OUTPUT CONTROL UTILIZING SERIES-CONNECTED IGBTs by J.F. TOOKER and P. HUYNH

J.Shafii, J.N. Talmadge, R.J. Vernon, HSX team HSX Plasma Laboratory, University of Wisconsin-Madison T. S. Bigelow, ORNL K.M.

Study of Elliptical Polarization Requirement of KSTAR 84-GHz ECH System

2.2 MW Operation of the European Coaxial-Cavity Pre-Prototype Gyrotron for ITER

GA A FABRICATION OF A 35 GHz WAVEGUIDE TWT CIRCUIT USING RAPID PROTOTYPE TECHNIQUES by J.P. ANDERSON, R. OUEDRAOGO, and D.

The report includes materials of three papers:

Development in Russia of Megawatt Power Gyrotrons for Fusion

Final. NO.Report CRADA. Date: September 11, 1997

UCRL-ID Broad-Band Characterization of the Complex Permittivity and Permeability of Materials. Carlos A. Avalle

ENLARGEMENT OF GLASS AND PLASTIC SHELLS TO 2 mm IN DIAMETER BY REDROPPING THROUGH A SHORT HEATED TOWER

ECRF Heating on CS Reactors

CT-7Ra Development of Gyrotron and JT-60U EC Heating System for Fusion Reactor

Introduction to Radar Systems. Radar Antennas. MIT Lincoln Laboratory. Radar Antennas - 1 PRH 6/18/02

AN ELM=RESlLlENT RF ARC DETECTION SYSTEM FOR DIII-D BASED ON ELECTROMAGNETIC AND SOUND EMISSIONS FROM THE ARC

National Fusion Research Institute a. Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

SUMMARY OF THE EXPERIMENTAL SESSION EC-10 WORKSHOP

GA A23983 AN ADVANCED COLLABORATIVE ENVIRONMENT TO ENHANCE MAGNETIC FUSION RESEARCH

Design study for JT-60SA ECRF system and the latest results of JT-60U ECRF system

2. Achievement of reliable long pulse operation of 1 MW 170 GHz gyrotron

GA A22712 DIII D ICRF HIGH VOLTAGE POWER SUPPLY REGULATOR UPGRADE

GYROTRON-BASED MILLIMETER-WAVE: BEAMS FOR MATERIAL PROCESSING. Thomas Hardek Wayne Cooke. William P e r r y D a n i e l Rees

TESTS AND PERFORMANCE ON THE SIX GYROTRON SYSTEM ON THE DIII-D TOKAMAK

FAST WAVE ANTENNA ARRAY FEED CIRCUITS TOLERANT OF TIMElVARYING LOADING FOR DIII-D

+o GENEML ATOMfCS. RF POWER DIAGNOSTICS AND CONTROL ON THE DIII-D, 4 MW MHz FAST WAVE CURRENT DRIVE SYSTEM (FWCD)

MAPPING INDUCED POLARIZATION WITH NATURAL ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS FOR EXPLORATION AND RESOURCES CHARACTERIZATION BY THE MINING INDUSTRY

MAPPING INDUCED POLARIZATION WITH NATURAL ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS FOR EXPLORATION AND RESOURCES CHARACTERIZATION BY THE MINING INDUSTRY

High Explosive Radio Telemetry System. Federal Manufacturing & Technologies. R. Johnson, FM&T; B. Mclaughlin, FM&T;

Recent progress of 170 GHz Gyrotron in KSTAR

Introduction to Radar Systems. The Radar Equation. MIT Lincoln Laboratory _P_1Y.ppt ODonnell

Recent Development Results in Russia of Megawatt Power Gyrotrons for Plasma Fusion Installations

Installation of 84-GHz, 500-kW KSTAR ECH system

PRESENT STATUS OF THE NEW MULTI-FREQUENCY ECRH SYSTEM FOR ASDEX UPGRADE

Radio Frequency Current Drive for Small Aspect Ratio Tori

High Frequency Gyrotrons and Their Applications

Megawatt Power Level 120 GHz Gyrotrons for ITER Start-Up

Operational progress of 170GHz 1MW ECH system in KSTAR

Sandia National Laboratories MS 1153, PO 5800, Albuquerque, NM Phone: , Fax: ,

Experimental Results of Series Gyrotrons for the Stellarator W7-X

The ACT External HEPA Push-Through Filter Assembly. A. A. Frigo, S. G. Wiedmeyer, D. E. Preuss, E. F. Bielick, and R. F. Malecha

RF HIGH VOLTAGE PERFORMANCE OF RF TRANSMISSION LINE COMPONENTS ON THE DIII-D FAST WAVE CURRENT DRIVE (FWCD) SYSTEM

ICRF Physics in KSTAR Steady State

3.10 Lower Hybrid Current Drive (LHCD) System

P. Koert, P. MacGibbon, R. Vieira, D. Terry, R.Leccacorvi, J. Doody, W. Beck. October 2008

GA A25824 A NEW OVERCURRENT PROTECTION SYSTEM FOR THE DIII-D FIELD SHAPING COILS

Development of the long-pulse ECRF system for JT-60SA

ECRH on the Levitated Dipole Experiment

Active Control for Stabilization of Neoclassical Tearing Modes

GA A22869 BOUNCE COATING INDUCED DOMES ON GLOW DISCHARGE POLYMER COATED SHELLS

Nanosecond, pulsed, frequency-modulated optical parametric oscillator

' Institut fuer Kernphysik, Strahlenzentrum, JLU Giessen, Germany 3

GA A23741 DATA MANAGEMENT, CODE DEPLOYMENT, AND SCIENTIFIC VISUALIZATION TO ENHANCE SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY THROUGH ADVANCED COMPUTING

Fundamental Mode RF Power Dissipated in a Waveguide Attached to an Accelerating Cavity. Y. W. Kang

MITER BEND MIRROR DESIGN FOR CORRUGATED WAVEGUIDES

Simulating ohmic and mode conversion losses in corrugated waveguides for ITER LFSR system

by T.E. HARRIS, J.C. ALLEN, W.P. CARY, S.W. FERGUSON,* C.C. PETTY, and R.I. PINSKER

Development Status of KSTAR LHCD System

&wf-9+/ob/--21*~~ II. Ron Harper and Robert A. Hike

Non-inductive Production of Extremely Overdense Spherical Tokamak Plasma by Electron Bernstein Wave Excited via O-X-B Method in LATE

GA A24463 CONTROL SYSTEM FOR THE LITHIUM BEAM EDGE PLASMA CURRENT DENSITY DIAGNOSTIC ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

Performance of Smoothing by Spectral Dispersion (SSD) with Frequency Conversion on the Beamlet Laser for the National Ignition Facility

Development of a Multi-Purpose, Multi-Frequency Gyrotron for DEMO at KIT

Five-beam Fabry-Perot velocimeter

National Accelerator Laboratory

ECRH Beam Optics Optimization for ITER Upper Port Launcher

ELECTRON cyclotron heating (ECH) using high-power

RECENT UPGRADES AND EXTENSIONS OF THE ASDEX UPGRADE ECRH SYSTEM

Measurements of MeV Photon Flashes in Petawatt Laser Experiments

Mitigation of Laser Damage Growth in Fused Silica with a Galvanometer Scanned CO2 Laser

PEP-I11Magnet Power Conversion Systems:.

Preparation of Random Phase Plates for Laser Beam Smoothing

Transcription:

GA-A22466 HIGH-POWER CORRUGATED WAVEGUIDE COMPONENTS FOR mm-wave FUSION HEATING SYSTEMS by RA OLSTAD, J.L DOANE, C.P. MOELLER, R.C. O'NEILL, and M. Di MARTINO WSIWB'JTIQM OF THIS DOCUMENT IS UNLIMITED -6 DISCLAIMER This report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States Government or any agency thereof. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof. OCTOBER 1996 GENERAL ATOMICS

DISCLAIMER This report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States Government or any agency thereof. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof.

DISCLAIMER Portions of this document may be illegible in electronic image products. Images are produced from the best available original document

GA-A22466 HIGH-POWER CORRUGATED WAVEGUIDE COMPONENTS FOR mm-wave FUSION HEATING SYSTEMS by R.A. OLSTAD, J.L DOANE, C.P. MOELLER, R.C. O'NEILL, and M. Di MARTINO This is a preprint of a paper to be presented at the 19th Symposium on Fusion Technology September 16-20,1996, Lisbon, Portugal and to be published in The Proceedings. Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC03-89ER51114 GA PROJECT 3466 OCTOBER 1996 GENERAL ATOMICS

High-Power Corrugated Waveguide Components for mm-wave Fusion Heating Systems* R.A. Olstad, J.L. Doane, C.P. Moeller, R.C. O'Neill, M. DiMartino General Atomics, P.O. Box 85608, San Diego, California 92186-5608, USA Considerable progress has been made over the last year in the U.S., Japan, Russia, and Europe in developing high power long pulse gyrotrons for fusion plasma heating and current drive. These advanced gyrotrons typically operate at a frequency in the range 82 GHz to 170 GHz at nearly megawatt power levels for pulse lengths up to 5 s. To take advantage of these new microwave sources for fusion research, new and improved transmission line components are needed to reliably transmit microwave power to plasmas with minimal losses. Over the last year, General Atomics and collaborating companies (Spinner GmbH in Europe and Toshiba Corporation in Japan) have developed a wide variety of new components which meet the demanding power, pulse length, frequency, and vacuum requirements for effective utilization of the new generation of gyrotrons. These components include low-loss straight corrugated waveguides, miter bends, miter bend polarizers, power monitors, waveguide bellows, dc breaks, waveguide switches, dummy loads, and distributed windows. These components have been developed with several different waveguide diameters (32, 64, and 89 mm) and frequency ranges (82 GHz to 170 GHz). This paper describes the design requirements of selected components and their calculated and measured performance characteristics. 1. INTRODUCTION Electron cyclotron heating (ECH) has become accepted as one of the most efficient and technologically attractive methods for adding energy to fusion plasmas. Until recently, the main limitation of using ECH heating has been the lack of high power mm-wave sources in the 82 GHz to 170 GHz range. Fusion devices with larger magnetic fields and higher plasma densities require higher frequency sources. The gyrotron, a high power mm-wave source, has been under development for a number of years in Russia, Europe, U.S., and Japan; and frequency, power level, and pulse length capabilities are continually improving. The transmission line system from gyrotron to plasma must be designed to handle the high frequency, power, and pulse length with low losses and low reflection back to the gyrotron. The most demanding component for high power cw transmission is the window. Presently ECH power/pulse length that can be delivered to the plasma is limited by the performance of the window. The development status of ECH windows and other key components is presented below. 2. Dm-D GYROTRONS AND RECENT ECH HEATING RESULTS The DIII-D program at General Atomics in San Diego is planning to install 10 MW of ECH power to provide the localized heating and current drive needed to execute the Advanced Tokamak program. The first 110 GHz 1 MW gyrotron of a 3 MW initial system is presently being commissioned [1]. This first gyrotron is a state-of-the-art internal-modeconverter gyrotron manufactured by GYCOM, a Russian company. This gyrotron was tested to 960 kw for 2 s into air in Russia. It is designed for cw operation, but the pulse length is limited by the performance of its boron nitride output window. In testing at the DUI-D facility during July 1996, the gyrotron has achieved 0.5 MW for 0.5 s both into a dummy load and into the plasma via transmission through an evacuated 31.75 mm diameter corrugated waveguide system. Increased power and pulse length are planned for late 1996. Two other MW-level 110 GHz gyrotrons manufactured by CPI are scheduled to be installed in late 1996-1997. Recent experiments at DJU-D dramatically show the effectiveness of mm-waves in heating fu *Work supported by U.S. Department of Energy under Contract Nos. DE-AC03-89ER51114, DE-AC03-89ER52153 and General Atomics commercial contracts.

sion plasmas. Figure 1 shows that the deposition of 500 kw for 0.5 s into a low density plasma increased the central electron temperature from 3 kev to 10 kev. The power was transmitted to DIII-D using 40 m of small diameter (31.75 mm) evacuated corrugated waveguide with no evidence of breakdown [2]. Further electron temperature increases are expected when the power and pulse length are increased. Future ECH work at DIII-D will concentrate on profile control applications. A key component in obtaining the desired current profile for enhanced confinement regimes is the "off-axis" current driven with the millimeter wave system. 3. COMPONENT DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS In order to transmit the microwaves from the gyrotron source to the plasma, the transmission line must meet a number of demanding requirements: 1. Low reflected power back to the gyrotron. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Low loss in the transmission line, i.e. < 10%. Maintain mode purity so microwaves launch into well-defined locations in the plasma. Ability to control the mm-wave polarization for optimal absorption in the plasma. Ability to monitor the beam power. Ability to operate at the desired frequency for high power operation at long pulse length. Shot: 90644 n e (O) = 5x10i8 m -3 BT = 2T ECH power = 1/2 MW 7/31/96 7. Compact transmission because of limited real estate near fusion devices. The components that need to be designed to meet the above requirements generally include some or all of the following: matching optics unit (MOU), taper, mode converter or mode filter, waveguide switch, dummy (calorimetric) load, straight waveguide, continuous curvature bends, miter bends, power monitor miter bend, polarizer miter bends, pumpout, bellows, d.c. break, window, and launcher. The use of corrugated waveguide for transmitting mm-waves in the HEi i mode results in very low losses. For a 63.5 mm waveguide with corrugation geometry suitable for 100-300 GHz transmission, the losses versus frequency are as shown in Fig. 2(a). These losses were calculated using a space harmonic analysis of the corrugated waveguide to obtain the propagation constants and the electric and magnetic fields. Mode conversion in straight corrugated waveguide propagating HEn mode is negligible. However, mode conversion can result from misalignment of waveguide supports, especially at higher frequencies [Fig. 2(b)]. At 170 GHz, the misalignment must be limited to 1 mm to keep losses down to 0.07 db (1.6%) per 25 m. In miter bends, losses are due to ohmic heating, mode conversion in ideal bends, and mode conversion due to mirror misalignment [3]. Results of loss calculations vs. frequency for aluminum mirrors are shown in Fig. 2(c). The dominant loss above 140 GHz is due to mirror misalignment, which was assumed in these calculations to be 0.001 radian. At 170 GHz, the total loss is about 0.05 db, or 1.2%. These calculations show that low loss transmission can be achieved in a 63.5 mm waveguide system at 100-300 GHz. 4. REPRESENTATIVE RECENTLY- FABRICATED COMPONENTS Fig. 1. Plasma electron temperature versus normalized minor radius with ohmic heating alone (OH) and with 0.5 MW/0.5 s ECH. GA and its collaborating companies have recently fabricated or are presently fabricating ECH transmission lines for several major devices. In Europe, Spinner GmbH is prime contractor and GA is subcontractor to Spinner in delivering transmission line components to CRPP for the TCV device at Lausanne, Switzerland and to CEA for the Tore Supra device at Cadarache, France. The

0.2 Total Mode conversion from mirror misalignment Ohmlc loss In mirror (E-plane polarization) 0.0 150 200 250 Frequency (GHz) 300 100 150 200 250 Frequency (GHz) 300 100 150 200 250 Frequency (GHz) Fig. 2. Calculated losses in 63.5 mm waveguide components for 100-300 GHz HEn transmission: (a) straight corrugated waveguide, (b) waveguide with random misalignment every 2 m, and (c) miter bends. 300 components for both of these customers were designed by GA, and fabrication efforts are shared between the two companies. In Japan, GA recently supplied a number of specialized components to Toshiba Corporation, which is prime contractor for supplying transmission lines to NIFS for the LHD device at Toki, Japan. In addition to these collaborative efforts, GA fabricates components for DUJ-D and other fusion devices worldwide. Descriptions of typical components are: 4.1. Waveguide Switch for TCV, Lausanne GA designed and fabricated waveguide switches for Spinner for use on the TCV device at Lausanne. This is a critical component because it enables the gyrotron to stay conditioned by diverting its power to a dummy load between plasma shots. To make the switch, three short 63.5 mm corrugated aluminum waveguides are inserted into the walls of an aluminum housing. Vacuum seals between waveguides and housing are made using metal Helicoflex seals. A pneumatically-controlled linear vacuum feedthrough moves a hardened block inside the housing. In the normal position, the mm-waves pass straight through a corrugated hole in this block from input to output waveguide. In the switched position, a copper mirror diverts the power to the third waveguide at 90 to the others. Pneumaticallycontrolled vacuum valves can close off either of the output waveguides so they can be at atmospheric pressure while maintaining vacuum in the remaining waveguides. The switches are currently being tested at Lausanne. 4.2. Transmission Line Components for TCV and Tore Supra Spinner and GA jointly fabricated corrugated waveguides, bellows, miter bends, power monitor miter bends, pumpouts, and d.c. breaks for TCV and Tore Supra. Straight waveguides and miter bends are used to guide the mm-waves from the gyrotron source to the fusion device. Power monitor miter bends are devices for sampling the beam to determine its power level. Bellows are useful to accommodate thermal expansion and contraction of a line during bakeout cycles. All of these components have been successfully tested using 500 kw 1.6 s pulses on one evacuated line at Lausanne. Spinner and GA also jointly fabricated a dummy load designed for 500 kw 2 s operation for TCV. One of the loads has been tested at Thomson Tubes Electroniques for over twenty 420 kw, 2 s shots using their 118 GHz gyrotron. The loads are now. being tested at Lausanne with 500 kw 82.6 GHz 1.6 s pulses. GA also fabricated a similar dummy load for DIJJ.-D designed to handle 500 kw for 10 s. The Lausanne loads absorb power in the stainless steel body; the DUI-D load uses an Inconel liner to handle the longer pulse lengths and consequent higher temperatures. 4.3 Dummy Load for LHD, Toki This year, GA fabricated four dummy loads (3 at 168 GHz, 1 at 84 GHz) for Toshiba for use on the LHD device. A particularly demanding requirement was that they operate both under vacuum and at 1 atm. This prevented use of materials that would

absorb too much energy from the incident beam and cause arcing or plasma discharge in the low density gas in front of the hot surface. Toshiba's specifications called for the load to handle 500 kw for 100 ms with a 1% duty cycle, with <2% reflected power. To achieve this performance, a carbon-carbon composite material was found with suitable thermal, electrical, and mechanical properties. The loads were designed to have enough bounces so that more than 98% of the power is absorbed by the time the mm-wave beam returns to the input waveguide. Low power reflection measurements on the 84 GHz load showed the reflected power in the HEj i mode to be less than 0.5%. High power tests on this load will be performed at Toki later this year. 4.4. Polarizer Miter Bends for LHD, Toki GA also fabricated four pairs of 88.9 mm miter bend polarizers for Toshiba for the LHD. The mirrors are remotely rotatable to achieve any arbitrary polarization and with ellipticity varying from 0 to at least 30. The first miter bend acts as a circular polarizer to produce the desired ellipticity. The second mirror acts as a polarization rotator to achieve the desired polarization. The 84 GHz polarizer geometry was confirmed by measurements at GA in which a linear polarized beam was rotated to achieve output polarization varying from -90 to +90 degrees. The desired output polarization was achieved as predicted, with <0.2% of the power in unwanted polarization. The copper mirrors are water-cooled to enable operation at 500 kw for 10 s under vacuum or at 1 atm. 4.5. Distributed Window for DIII-D GA has been developing distributed windows for use with high-power long-pulse gyrotrons. A 10 cm x 10 cm 110 GHz distributed window consists of 42 sapphire strips separated by watercooled metal vanes. The geometry of the sapphire and vanes is such that the mm-waves pass through the sapphire with low loss (4%) and low reflection (1%) [4]. A window made last year was tested at CPI at 200 kw with a reduced beam diameter. The tests demonstrated that the window can handle a power density and pulse length equivalent to that in a full size 1.2 MW cw beam with peak-to-average power ratio of 2.7. A new window is presently being fabricated for use on a CPI 110 GHz gyrotron for DIH-D. GA is also developing prototype and fullsize 170 GHz windows with improved fabricability, decreased losses and increased bandwidth. 5. SUMMARY AND FUTURE PROSPECTS The use of mm-waves for plasma heating and current drive/profile control can greatly impact the progress in the development of magnetic fusion as an energy source for the future. A crucial aspect of being able to use the new mm-wave gyrotron sources is having efficient transmission line systems. GA intends to continue to be a leader in designing and making advanced ECH components to meet the demanding requirements of these applications. 6. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors would like to acknowledge the invaluable contributions of F. Pitschi, W. Loewe, and H. Nickel of Spinner GmbH, and S. Sasaki of Toshiba Corporation. REFERENCES 1. R.W. Callis et al., "Status of the Dffl-D 110 GHz ECH system," (General Atomics Report No. GA-A22378), Proc. 12th Topical Meeting on Technology of Fusion Energy, Reno, Nevada, (1996) to be published. 2. R.L. Freeman, "Applications of high power millimeter waves in the DIII-D fusion program," Proc. International Conf. on Millimeter and Sub-millimeter Waves and Applications III, (1996) to be published. 3. J.L. Doane and C.P. Moeller, "HEn mitre bends and gaps in a circular corrugated waveguide," Int. J. Electronics, 77,489. 4. C.P. Moeller, J.L. Doane, et al., "A vacuum window for a 1 MW cw 110 GHz Gyrotron," 19th Int. Conf. on Infrared and Millimeter Waves, (1994) 279.