Divertor Optimization via Control at DIII-D

POSTER

Abstract

DIII-D divertor performance and heat-handling capabilities are optimized using advanced control techniques. The world's first real-time snowflake divertor detection and control system was implemented on DIII-D in order to stabilize and optimize this configuration. A new control system was implemented to regulate and study detachment and radiation, since future fusion reactors will require detached or partially detached plasmas to achieve acceptable divertor target heat fluxes. The algorithm regulates the $D_{2}$ and impurity gas injection level by using the divertor temperature measurements from real-time Thomson diagnostics to compute the detachment level, and the real-time bolometer diagnostics to determine core and divertor radiation. This control allows the optimization of the detachment and radiation from the core and the divertor to achieve high core performance compatible with reduced heat-flux to the divertor.

Authors

  • E. Kolemen

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, PPPL

  • S.L. Allen

    LLNL, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • M.A. Makowski

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, LLNL

  • V. Soukhanovskii

    LLNL, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • B.D. Bray

    GA, General Atomics

  • D.A. Humphreys

    General Atomics, GA

  • R. Johnson

    GA

  • A.W. Leonard

    GA, General Atomics

  • C. Liu

    GA

  • B.G. Penaflor

    GA

  • T.W. Petrie

    General Atomics, GA

  • D. Eldon

    GA, UCSD

  • A.G. McLean

    LLNL, ORNL

  • E.A. Unterberg

    ORNL