1 / 16

Energetic Particle Physics in Burning Plasmas: from ITER to DEMO

Energetic Particle Physics in Burning Plasmas: from ITER to DEMO. Guoyong Fu on behalf of Energetic Particle SFG. Acknowledgement: E. Fredrickson, C. Kessel, G. Kramer, N. Gorelenkov, R. Nazikian, W. Tang. FESAC Strategic Planning Meeting, Aug. 7, 2007, PPPL. Outline. Introduction

eliora
Download Presentation

Energetic Particle Physics in Burning Plasmas: from ITER to DEMO

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Energetic Particle Physics in Burning Plasmas: from ITER to DEMO Guoyong Fu on behalf of Energetic Particle SFG Acknowledgement: E. Fredrickson, C. Kessel, G. Kramer, N. Gorelenkov, R. Nazikian, W. Tang FESAC Strategic Planning Meeting, Aug. 7, 2007, PPPL

  2. Outline • Introduction • Alpha particle-driven modes: linear stability and nonlinear dynamics • Alpha particle-driven modes in ITER and DEMO • New initiative for advanced predictive simulations of multiple modes in ITER and DEMO

  3. Introduction • A key question for burning plasmas is whether alpha particle transport is classical (i.e., slow-down via collisions or anomalous due to instabilities. • In a fusion reactor, super-Alfvenic alpha particles can resonantly destabilize Alfven eigenmodes and EPMs. • Alpha particle loss or redistribution can be caused by: Ripple MHD modes such as sawteeth and NTM Alfven instabilities (fishbone/TAE/EPM)

  4. Why we care • Alpha particle loss can seriously damage reactor wall and degrade alpha heating; • Alpha particle redistribution can modify alpha heating deposition profile; • Alpha particles can significantly influence MHD stability (sawtooth, resistive wall modes, kinetic ballooning modes etc) • Alpha particle-driven Alfven modes may influence thermal plasma equilibrium, stability and confinement via their effects on NBI-driven current, zonal flow etc (nonlinear coupling !)

  5. What we know • Single particle confinement is well understood (slowing-down, ripple loss, loss due to a given MHD perturbation) • Linear stability of TAE is well understood (alpha drive and damping mechanisms) • Nonlinear dynamics of a single alpha-driven mode (saturation due to wave-particle trapping, hole-clump formation and frequency chirping)

  6. A variety of AEs and collective effects due to fast ions Models and numerical tools: High frequency modes ci, ci(velocity transport): Linear MHD NOVA code ci,ci Linear wave code TORIC Nonlinear HYM initial value, hybrid Low frequency modes ci (radial transport): Linear codes: HINST – local nonperturbative ballooning NOVA-K –hybrid MHD-kinetic NOVA-KN – nonperturbative global hybrid Nonlinear codes: M3D – initial value hybrid MHD-kinetic code NOVA-K – reduced theoretical model for wave saturation and fast ion transport Single particle motion: ORBIT code Rich spectrum of modes in tokamaks

  7. What we don’t know well • Alpha particle transport in the presence of multiple modes • Feedback of alpha particle-driven instabilities on thermal plasmas

  8. Linear Stability of TAE • Alpha particle drive • Plasma dampings: ion Landau damping electron collisional damping “radiative damping” due to FLR  stability is sensitive to plasma parameters and profiles !

  9. Alpha particle drive is maximized at kqra ~ 1 G.Y. Fu et al, Phys. Fluids B4, 3722 (1992)

  10. Parameters of Fusion Reactors

  11. Critical alpha parameters of TFTR/JET, ITER and DEMO DEMO_Japan ba/bc DEMO_EU ARIES-AT ARIES-ST ITER JET TFTR a/ra

  12. Multiple high-n TAEs are expected be excited in ITER from NOVA-K Instability is maximized at kqra ~ 1 N.N. Gorelenkov, Nucl. Fusion 2003

  13. NSTX observes that multi-mode TAE bursts can lead to larger fast-ion losses than single-mode bursts 1% neutron rate decrease: 5% neutron rate decrease: • TAE avalanches cause enhanced fast-ion losses. • Potential to model island overlap condition with full diagnostic set. E. Fredrickson, Phys. Plasmas 13, 056109 (2006)

  14. State of art nonlinear simulations (M3D) can treat a few low-n modes (n=1,2 & 3) time

  15. DEMO versus ITER • Alpha drive is higher and mode number is larger in DEMO • Expect stronger Alfven instability and more modes >> wave particle resonance overlap and alpha particle redistribution likely ! • Alpha beta is a significant fraction of thermal beta >> alpha particle effects on MHD modes and thermal plasma stronger !

  16. New initiative for predictive simulation of multiple alpha-driven high-n Alfven modes in ITER and DEMO • It is needed urgently for ITER operation and for design of DEMO; • This is a scientific grand challenging project. • Needs most advanced supercomputer because it requires much higher spatial resolution and much longer simulation time as compared to the state of art. • Needs careful experimental validation for predictive capability.  better diagnostic for Alfven modes and alpha particle distribution.  need more manpower for nonlinear simulations.

More Related