Using Pedestal Physics to Close the Integrated Tokamak Performance and Exhaust (ITEP) Gap
ORAL
Abstract
The edge transport barrier, or "pedestal," provides the interface between the hot core fusion plasma, and the much cooler boundary plasma which exhausts heat and particles from the system. To close the ITEP gap, an order of magnitude improvement in the product of core fusion performance (measured by the product of pressure and bootstrap fraction) and parallel heat exhaust capability (measured by PB/R) is required, relative to both existing devices and ITER. Here we employ an updated version of the EPED pedestal model, both independently and coupled to core transport (TGLF) and boundary physics (SOLPS) models, to develop and optimize regimes which potentially close the ITEP gap. Strong shaping, moderate aspect ratio (R/a~2.3-2.7), and high field (B>~6T) facilitate operation with a high pressure pedestal limited by current-driven kink/peeling modes ("peeling limited," including the "Super H-mode" regime) even at relatively high density. In this peeling-limited regime, the pedestal is predicted not to be degraded by high separatrix density and pressure, facilitating compatibility with a dense radiative divertor plasma. Promising regimes are identified both for a demonstration device and a compact fusion pilot plant.
–
Publication: publication in progress
Presenters
-
Philip B Snyder
Oak Ridge National Lab
Authors
-
Philip B Snyder
Oak Ridge National Lab
-
John Canik
Oak Ridge National Lab
-
Jerry W Hughes
MIT PSFC
-
Matthias Knolker
General Atomics
-
Orso Meneghini
General Atomics - San Diego
-
Tom H Osborne
General Atomics - San Diego, General Atomics
-
Jin Myung Park
Oak Ridge National Lab
-
Wayne M Solomon
General Atomics - San Diego
-
Robert S Wilcox
Oak Ridge National Lab
-
Theresa M Wilks
MIT
-
Howard R Wilson
University of York