Development of a RF-driven ion source for the ITER NBI system

Extensive R&D work on RF-driven negative hydrogen ion sources carried out at IPP Garching led to the decision of ITER to select this type of source as the new reference source for the ITER NBI system. The principle suitability of the RF source has been demonstrated in a small scale, short pulse length experiment: accelerated current densities, co-extracted electron currents at a source operation pressure, all well inside the range of the ITER requirements have been achieved simultaneously. In subsequent experiments, pulse lengths up to 1 h and the possibility of modularly extending the source to ITER source dimensions were demonstrated. The results achieved at the various IPP test beds, the lessons learnt during optimising the source for negative ion production and extraction as well as the problems still to be solved are summarized. As the next step in support of the NBI development for ITER, IPP plans to build a new test facility for beam extraction from a source of half the size for ITER.