1 / 14

Advanced Tokamak Plasmas and the F usion I gnition R esearch E xperiment

Advanced Tokamak Plasmas and the F usion I gnition R esearch E xperiment. Charles Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Spring APS, Philadelphia, 4/5/2003. What is an A dvanced T okamak?. The advanced tokamak plasma simultaneously obtains Stationary state

teresaortiz
Download Presentation

Advanced Tokamak Plasmas and the F usion I gnition R esearch E xperiment

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. Advanced Tokamak Plasmas and the Fusion Ignition Research Experiment Charles Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Spring APS, Philadelphia, 4/5/2003

  2. What is an Advanced Tokamak? • The advanced tokamak plasma simultaneously obtains • Stationary state • High plasma kinetic pressure ----> MHD stability • High self-driven current ----> Bootstrap current • Sufficiently good particle and energy confinement ----> Plasma transport • Plasma edge that allows particle and power handling ----> Boundary condition between hot core plasma and vacuum/solid walls • The advanced tokamak is a recognition that the tokamak is an integrated system and requires control to succeed • The advanced tokamak is a tough nut to crack

  3. Appreciating the plasma’s integrated behavior is helping us learn to control it RWM feedback Pellet injection NBI rotation Alpha heating NTM feedback Safety factor Transport plasma Divertor pumping Current profile (bootstrap) Pressure profile Plasma shaping Impurity injection Ion/electron heating LHCD, FWCD, NBCD, ECCD, HHFW

  4. Next Step Devices Must Provide the Basis for Advanced Tokamak Reactor Regime AT FIRE AT is approaching the reactor AT regime KSTAR FIRE Present tokamak experiments are pushing the envelope Inductive

  5. Local Reduction of Energy, Particle, and Momentum Transport in Plasmas • By Manipulating: • Magnetic field distribution • Momentum injection • Electron/ion heating • Current distribution • Impurity injection • D Pellet injection • we are learning to control the location and width of the transport reduction temperatures density&velocity magnetic field twist thermal conductivity center edge ASDEX-U

  6. Theory and Experiments Show That Powerful MHD Instabilities Can Be Controlled DIII-D, General Atomics HBT-EP, Columbia Univ.

  7. Impurities Can Control Where Power from the Plasma is Deposited Power radiated more uniformly throughout vessel Power radiated onto high heat flux surfaces

  8. Large Plasma Self-Driven Current Fractions are Being Attained ASDEX-U, Germany 60-90% of the plasma current is driven by the plasma itself, from its pressure gradient Japan DIII-D,USA

  9. FIRE Has Adopted the AT Features Identified by ARIES Reactor Studies • High toroidal field • Double null • Strong shaping • Internal vertical position control coils • Wall stabilizers for vertical and kink instabilities • Very low toroidal field ripple • ICRF/FW on-axis CD • LH off-axis CD • NTM stabilization from LHCD, ECCD, q>2 • Tungsten divertor targets • Feedback coil stabilization of RWMs • Burn times exceeding current diffusiontimes • Pumped divertor/pellet fueling/impurity control to optimize plasma edge

  10. FIRE is Aggressively Pursuing AT Control Tools

  11. AT Physics Control Capability on FIRE Strong plasma shaping and control Pellet injection Divertor pumping Impurity injection ICRF/FW (electron heating/CD) on-axis ICRF ion heating on/off-axis LHCD (electron heating/CD) off-axis ECCD off-axis (Ohkawa current drive) RWM MHD feedback control t(flattop)/t(curr diff) = 1-5 Diagnostics MHD J-Profile P-profile Flow-profile

  12. FIRE Pushes to Self-Consistently Simulate Advanced Tokamak Modes 0-D Systems Analysis:Determine viable operating point global parameters that satisfy constraints Plasma Equilibrium and Ideal MHD Stability: (JSOLVER, BALMSC, PEST2, VALEN), Determine self-consistent stable plasma configurations to serve as targets Heating/Current Drive: (LSC, ACCOME, PICES, SPRUCE, CURRAY), Determine current drive efficiencies and deposition profiles Transport:(GLF23 and pellet fueling models to be used in TSC) Determine plasma density and temperature profiles consistent with heating/fueling and plasma confinement Integrated Dynamic Evolution Simulations: (Tokamak Simulation Code, WHIST, Baldur)Demonstrate self-consistent startup/formation and control including transport, current drive, fueling and equilibrium Edge/SOL/Divertor:(UEDGE) Find self-consistent solutions connecting the core plasma with the divertor

  13. FIRE ATIntegrated SimulationsShow Attractive Features Q ≈ 5

  14. Advanced Tokamaks --- We Want to Have It Our Way • The advanced tokamak is characterized by the features we need for a viable fusion power plant • Access to this regime requires control of the plasma and we are learning how by penetratingits coupled physics • FIRE is a next step burning plasma device • Utilizing experimental advanced tokamak accomplishments • Adopting design features of advanced tokamak reactor designs • Applying integrated simulation tools to project the advanced tokamak performance • FIRE can bridge the AT physics gap from present experiments to the reactor regime

More Related