Modeling anomalous radial transport in kinetic transport codes

POSTER

Abstract

Anomalous transport is typically the dominant component of the radial transport in magnetically confined plasmas, where the physical origin of this transport is believed to be plasma turbulence. A model is presented for anomalous transport that can be used in continuum kinetic edge codes like TEMPEST, NEO and the next-generation code being developed by the Edge Simulation Laboratory. The model can also be adapted to particle-based codes. It is demonstrated that the model with a velocity-dependent diffusion and convection terms can match a diagonal gradient-driven transport matrix as found in contemporary fluid codes, but can also include off-diagonal effects. The anomalous transport model is also combined with particle drifts and a particle/energy-conserving Krook collision operator to study possible synergistic effects with neoclassical transport. For the latter study, a velocity-independent anomalous diffusion coefficient is used to mimic the effect of long-wavelength ExB turbulence.

Authors

  • K. Bodi

    UCSD

  • S.I. Krasheninnikov

    UCSD

  • R.H. Cohen

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, LLNL, Lawrence Livermore National Lab

  • T.D. Rognlien

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, LLNL