Chamber Specifications:
Flanges
1 CF65 4"OD on rear of chamber, conected to turbopump assembly
3 CF40 2.75"OD on circumference of chamber
1 KF40 flange on turbopump assy, connected to gauge assembly
Feedthroughs
1 >10kV shielded ceramic HV feed on turbopump assy.
1 >5kV Ceramic CF40 feed on front of chamber
3 >1kV Ceramic CF40 feeds left of chamber
1 Swagelok gas inlet feed on turbopump assy.
2 >MHV/BNC Coaxial feeds on turbopump assy.
Dimensions
Vol ~15L
Current Capabilities:
The Fjasekammer is currently capable of pumping down to ~2E-2 mBar.
The chamber can easily run basic plasma demonstrations.
It is for all serious vacuum uses shit, and must be improved upon.
Current state:
The Fjasekammer has of October gotten upgraded quite extensively;
- Fitted with a Varian TV-70 series turboump
- Rigid mounting on steel bottom plate
- Controls operated from rear of rack
Issues with current state:
- Has major leak or outgassing issues preventing operation below <2E-2 mBar.
- The system is not yet truly presentable, rusty metal, poor welds, crappy wiring and exposed PCB's abound.
- For general high pressure plasma displays electrode is mounted and insulated poorly, is prone to falling apart and cannot withstand >1.2kV at practical lighting demonstrations without arcing.
- Vacuum gauging is done with a multimeter and printed conversion chart.
- No control panel exists, operation is spread across >6 different control surfaces.
- Cannot do much useful
Future improvements:
- Unified Control Panel, possibly remote operation
- Vacuum floor at least at <1E-6 mBar
- Polished structure and appearance, lacquered side panels and polished steel surfaces
- HV feedthrough capable of >35kV operation with installed HV shield, proper mounting and connection of tungsten center electrode, appropriate HV-PSU, deuterium gas handling system and neutron detector can allow chamber to work as proper fusor, and allow demonstrations of ion jets and thrust. Also seriously fucking cool, probably first Norwegian neutron club initiates.
- Make completely self- contained and automated enough that experience w/ vacuum systems is not required.