The physics of plasma detachment in the novel MAST-Upgrade Super-X divertor
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
During detachment, first the ionisation source detaches from the target, leaving behind a region with elevated molecular densities. In that region, molecular ions are formed that interact with the plasma, resulting in strong hydrogen emission, ion sinks through molecular activated recombination (MAR) and neutral atom sources from molecular activated dissociation. The MAR Ion sinks are significant compared to the ion source and ion target flux and occur earlier in the detachment sequence than electron-ion recombination (EIR). EIR only has a similar magnitude to MAR when target electron temperatures of < 0.3 eV are reached.
Comparison of our experimental results against SOLPS-ITER modelling indicates that plasma-molecular interactions are strongly underestimated in modelling. However, once corrected rates for molecular charge exchange were implemented in Eirene, plasma-molecular interactions are stronger, resulting in a greatly improved agreement between experiment and simulation.
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Publication: Publication (predecessor of this work): "The role of plasma-molecule interactions on power and particle balance during detachment on the TCV tokamak", Nuclear Fusion - DOI: 10.1088/1741-4326/ac1dc5. <br>Pre-print: "Spectroscopic investigations of detachment on the MAST Upgrade Super-X divertor" arXiv:2204.02118 (submitted to Nuclear Fusion)<br>Planned paper: "Investigating the role of plasma-atom/molecule interactions on detachment in the MAST Upgrade Super-X divertor through particle & power balance" (tentative title)<br>Planned paper: "Investigating the impact of molecular charge exchange on SOLPS-ITER simulations" (tentative title)<br>Planned paper: "The MAST Upgrade Divertor Monitoring Spectroscopy (DMS) diagnostic" (tentative title)
Presenters
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Kevin Verhaegh
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency
Authors
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Kevin Verhaegh
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency
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Bruce Lipschultz
University of York, The University of York
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James R Harrison
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency, CCFE, Culham Centre for Fusion Energy, UKAEA
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Nick Osborne
University of Liverpool
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Aelwyn C Williams
University of York
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P. Ryan
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency, CCFE
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Joseph Allcock
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency
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James Clark
University of Liverpool
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Fabio Federici
University of York
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Bob Kool
Dutch Institute For Fundamental Energy Research
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Tijs A Wijkamp
Eindhoven University of Technology
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David Moulton
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency, UKAEA
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Omkar Myatra
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency
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Christopher Bowman
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency
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Andrew J Thornton
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency, CCFE
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Lingyang Xiang
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Agency
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Jack Lovell
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Thomas van den Biggelaar
University of Eindhoven