Laboratorio Nacional de Fusión

From FusionWiki
Revision as of 12:21, 24 November 2010 by Admin (talk | contribs) (Reverted edits by Otihizuv (Talk) to last revision by Admin)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The National Fusion Laboratory is part of CIEMAT.

The Laboratory is dedicated to the development of fusion by magnetic confinement as a future energy generation option. Research is mainly centered on the Flexible Heliac TJ-II, and on materials studies.

History

In 1975, a research group is created at the JEN (later to become CIEMAT) to study the subject of fusion. In 1983, the small tokamak TJ-I is taken into operation, followed by the torsatron TJ-IU in 1994, and the flexible heliac TJ-II in 1999.

Organization

Organization and personnel

Projects and research

Computer resources

Due to the large computational needs of the Laboratory, it makes use of both internal and external resources through collaborations:

  • The CIEMAT computing centre, with the following computers:
    • JEN50 (SGI Origin system, already phased out)
    • Lince (HPC cluster)
    • Fenix (SGI Altix system w/ Itanium processors, currently being phased out)
    • Euler (Dell HPC cluster, 1152 Xeon cores, 13.8 Tflops)
  • The Barcelona Supercomputing Centre
  • The Spanish Supercomputing Network
  • LUSITANIA
  • BIFI (at the University of Zaragoza)
  • EGEE (Enabling Grids for E-SciencE, a European computational grid)
  • Ibercivis (Spanish computational grid)

Collaborations

The Laboratory participates in many international projects and collaborates with other institutions, such as:

Events

The Laboratory has organised many events, among which:

External Links

Website of the Laboratorio Nacional de Fusión

Website of CIEMAT