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Divertor Design Considerations for CFETR

Divertor Design Considerations for CFETR. Minyou Ye University of Science and Technology of China Houyang Guo a nd Institute of Plasma Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences 2 nd International Workshop on CFTER May 30 – June 1, Hefei , China. OUTLINE. OUTLINE.

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Divertor Design Considerations for CFETR

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  1. Divertor Design Considerations for CFETR Minyou Ye University of Science and Technology of China Houyang Guo and Institute of Plasma Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences 2ndInternational Workshop on CFTERMay 30 – June 1, Hefei, China

  2. OUTLINE

  3. OUTLINE

  4. CFETR-main parameters (CFETR-00-00-03)

  5. Integral Approach Is Mandatory for the Design of Plasma-Wall Interface

  6. Divertor Is a Key Component for CFETR

  7. Main Challenges for Divertor • Exhaust the major part of the plasma thermal power, reducing heat flux below limitation of target materials. • Removethe fusion reaction helium ash from core plasma while screening impurities from wall. • Maintain acceptable erosion rate in terms of reactor lifetime.

  8. Selection of High Heat Flux Materialsfor DEMO Divertor Target Availability, Cost Melting Point >2000 K Thermal Conductivity >50 W/mK B. Unterberg, 20th PSI Conf. 2012, Germany Low/Medium Activation e.g. TRC Irradiation

  9. Major Problem for W is Melting under Transient Heat Load R. Haange, ITER STAC-12,/2012, Cadarache W melting parameter: emelt 50 MJm-2s-1/2 • Disruptions and unmitigated ELMs are predicted to melt W target for ITER (above). • This will also apply to CFTER Disruption & ELM mitigation are mandatory. • W Melting detection and RH are required to repair W damage.

  10. CFETR Faces Much Greater Challenges than ITER due to Larger Duty Cycle ≥ 0.3 ~ 0.5 General migration pattern seen in today’s devices: main wall erosion, convection into divertor deposition R. Pitts, 2012 KSTAR Meeting • 9 years JET operation ~ 3 ITER QDT = 10 pulses in terms of divertor fluence, important for target erosion and T-retention  Much more serious for CFETR

  11. OUTLINE

  12. ITER-Like Vertical Target Structure full W divertor Inner vertical target (W) Outer vertical target (W) • detachment near strike points. • Reducing peak heat fluxes near strike points Dome (W) Pumping slot Reflector plates (W) Cassette body (SS)

  13. ITER-Like Vertical Target Structure • Subsystems to Integrate in lower part of vacuum vessel: • divertor cassettes with plasma facing components • - cooling system to exhaust plasma and neutronic heat deposition • cryopumps to exhaust neutralized gas • diagnostics to monitor plasma re-attachment • Fuelling system to promote plasma detachment / mitigate re-attachment • RH equipment to maintain components and maintenance operations • System integration : bring together all the component subsystems into one system ensuring that the subsystems function together as a system

  14. SD or DN ? • Advantages of DN: • Larger plasma-wetted area, facilitating power exhaust • Allowing pumping via both top and bottom, facilitating particle exhaust • Naturally large triangularity, facilitating advanced tokamakoperation • Advantages of SN: • Accommodating large plasma volume • Maximizing TBR

  15. OUTLINE

  16. Snow-Fake Divertor to Reduce Peak Heat Load “SNOWFALKE”: USING SECOND-ORDER NULL OF POLOIDAL FIELD TO IMPROVE DIVERTOR PERFORMANCE Features of snowflake divertors • Larger flux-expansion near the PF null • Increased connection length • Increased magnetic shear in the pedestal region (ELM suppression) • Modified blob transport (stronger flux-tube squeezing near the null-point) • Possibility to create this configuration with existing set of PF coils on the existing devices (TCV, NSTX, DIII-D….) • Possibility to create “snowflake” in ITER-scale machines with PF coils situated outside TF coils D. D. Ryutov, PoP 14, 064502 2007 DIII-D

  17. Snow-Fake Divertor to Reduce Peak Heat Load NSTX Snowflake Divertor V.A. Soukhanovskii, NSTX-PAC 31, PPPL, April 17-19, 2012 • Reduction from 3-7 MW/m2 to 0.5-1 MW/m2 between ELMs; Reduction from ~20 MW/m2 to 2-8 MW/m2 at ELM peak.

  18. Snow-Fake Divertor to Reduce Peak Heat Load NSTX Snowflake Divertor V.A. Soukhanovskii, NSTX-PAC 31, PPPL, April 17-19, 2012 • Reduction from 3-7 MW/m2 to 0.5-1 MW/m2 between ELMs; Reduction from ~20 MW/m2 to 2-8 MW/m2 at ELM peak.

  19. Super-X / Isolated Dovertor?

  20. High Temperature Operation? • [P. Norajitra et al., Fus. Eng. Des. 83 (2008) 893.] He-cooled modular divertor with jet cooling (finger concept, KIT)

  21. Approaches to CFETR Divertor Design Optimize Magnetic configurations and target geometry : 1. Optimize Magnetic configurations --- physics design group 2. Design target geometry 3. Calculate distributions of particles and heat using SOLPS code 4. Optimize target geometry Start engineering conceptual design: 1. Preliminary design on target, heat sink, support structure, cooling structure and cassette body… 2. Electromagnetic analysis of the divertor components (DINA/MIT+ANSYS) 3. Neutron volumetric heating calculations (code?) 4. Thermo-mechanical analysis and structure analysis (ANSYS) 5. Optimize divertor structure design

  22. Summary • Start to design ITER-like divertor; further look into other new divertor configurations, e.g., snowflake, isolated divertor configurations. • Start to design single null divertor; examine impact of DN on fusion gain and TBR

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