Tungsten erosion and leakage in the new DIII-D V-shaped small angle slot divertor
ORAL
Abstract
Validated impurity sourcing and transport simulations of the new tungsten-clad, V-shaped Small Angle Slot (SAS-VW) divertor in the DIII-D tokamak indicate the efficacy of closed, slot-like divertors in containing eroded high-Z impurities. Recent experiments measured a gross tungsten (W) erosion rate halfway between the entrance and bottom of the slot (known as the progressive angle, PA) of 1.3 × 1020 m-2 s-1 (Te ~16 eV, ne ~2.5 × 1019 m-3) with the outer strike point (OSP) at the PA, which decreased by a factor of 3.6 (30% drop in Te) when the OSP was moved to the slot bottom (ion B × ▽B drift towards the divertor). The observed trend is consistent with DIVIMP impurity transport simulations performed using a SOLPS-ITER plasma background (including particle drift effects), where the average W gross erosion rate calculated at the PA is 8.2 × 1018 m-2 s-1 (Te ~21 eV, ne ~1.5 × 1019 m-3) when the OSP is on the PA, and decreases by a factor of 54 (71% drop in Te) when the OSP is moved to the slot bottom. The probability that eroded W leaks into the core is predicted to decrease if sourced closer to the slot bottom, due to an increase in the parallel friction force. Benchmarked modeling of W transport provides valuable guidance for the design of reactor-scale, dissipative divertors.
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Presenters
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Gregory Sinclair
General Atomics - San Diego
Authors
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Gregory Sinclair
General Atomics - San Diego
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Tyler Abrams
General Atomics - San Diego, General Atomics
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Matthew S Parsons
Pennsylvania State University
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Roberto Maurizio
Oak Ridge Associated Universities / General Atomics
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Xinxing Ma
General Atomics, Oak Ridge Associated Universities
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Dan M Thomas
General Atomics - San Diego, General Atomics
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John D Elder
Univ of Toronto
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Seth H Messer
University of Tennessee - Knoxville
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Shawn A Zamperini
General Atomics
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Jake H Nichols
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab
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Peter C Stangeby
Univ of Toronto