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Utilizing two identical shattered pellet injections for thermal mitigation on DIII-D

POSTER

Abstract

Experiments on DIII-D used two SPIs with pellets of equal composition (~200 torr-L of pure Ne each) simultaneously or with a slight time delay between injections. Simultaneous injection exhibits a reduction in the pre-thermal quench time (time from when SPI fragments reach the plasma edge until the start of the thermal quench), relative to similar single SPI mitigated shutdowns. Radial electron density measurements increase in a similar fashion while a vertical array shows a much faster electron density increase in the plasma core for simultaneous SPIs. Total radiated energy during the thermal quench, determined through summing radiated energy at three toroidal locations, and the current quench (CQ) duration are approximately the same for single or simultaneous injection. Additionally, fast visible camera images and analysis of impurity radiation from fast bolometer fan arrays show the injected impurities spread primarily in the parallel direction, away from the injection location in two distinct regions, corresponding to each of the SPIs. This separation of radiative zones suggests a lower radiation peaking factor, which is a promising result towards the success of the massively parallel ITER SPI system.

Presenters

  • Jeffery L Herfindal

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab, ORNL

Authors

  • Jeffery L Herfindal

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab, ORNL

  • Daisuke Shiraki

    Oak Ridge National Lab, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Larry R BAYLOR

    ORNL, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Eric M Hollmann

    University of California San Diego, University of California, San Diego

  • Zana Popovic

    Oak Ridge Associated Univerisites, General Atomics - San Diego

  • Claudio Marini

    University of California San Diego

  • Nicholas Eidietis

    General Atomics - San Diego

  • Andrey Lvovskiy

    General Atomics