Boundary Modeling Integrated with RMP Plasma Response to Optimize ELM Suppression in KSTAR

ORAL

Abstract

Compatibility of divertor plasma detachment with application of resonant magnetic perturbations (RMPs) for control of edge localized modes (ELMs) is a key challenge for magnetic confinement fusion. The Korean Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research (KSTAR) facility is equipped with a flexible set of perturbation coils that allow scanning of the operation space (phasing and amplitude of individual coil rows) and fine-tuning of the ELM control window for optimal heat load spreading. We discuss the modeling framework required for this endeavor: a 3D boundary plasma model (EMC3-EIRENE) linked with a magnetohydrodynamic plasma response model (GPEC, MARS-F, ...). We show that uncertainties in plasma response model parameters propagate to the boundary model resulting in significant changes to the magnetic footprint which determines heat loads. The boundary plasma model is extended to include low collisionality corrections to the classical parallel heat conduction (heat flux limit).

Authors

  • Heinke Frerichs

    University of Wisconsin - Madison, UW - Madison

  • Jonathan Van Blarcum

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Oliver Schmitz

    University of Wisconsin - Madison, UW - Madison, UW Madison, Dept. of Engineering Physics, Madison, WI, USA

  • Jong-Kyu Park

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), PPPL, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • SeongMoo Yang

    PPPL, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • Yuhe Feng

    MPI Greifswald

  • Hyungho Lee

    National Fusion Research Institute, NFRI, Republic of Korea

  • Young-chul Ghim

    KAIST, Republic of Korea, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology

  • Wonjun Lee

    KAIST, Republic of Korea