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Experimental Validation of Collision-Radiation-Predissociation Dataset for Molecular Hydrogen and Its Application to Divertor Diagnostics

ORAL

Abstract

The need for quantitative spectroscopy of molecular hydrogen has experienced substantial demand, leading to the accumulation of diverse elementary-processes data encompassing radiative transitions, electron-impact transitions, and predissociations. In this study, we attempt an experimental validation of this dataset by comparing the vibronic populations across multiple molecular hydrogen levels: EF1Σ+g, H1Σ+g, D1Π±u, GK1Σ+g, I1Π±g , J1∆±g , h3Σ+g, e3Σ+u, d3Π±u, g3Σ+g , i3Π±g, and j3∆±g , measured from thousands of emission lines observed with a custom-made Echelle spectrometer. Our analysis incorporates a collisional-radiative model (CRM) that relies on the most up-to-date dataset and on spectrally observed populations from Large Helical Device (LHD) plasmas. Remarkably, we find that predissociation, which is the spontaneous dissociation process of excited molecules, is crucial for accurately replicating the observed outcomes, although many of the previously-reported CRM for molecular hydrogen have neglected this effect. We also demonstrate the possibility of a new divertor diagnostic technique utilizing the measured molecular spectrum interpreted through the CRM with predissociation included. This research also highlights that incorporation of predissociation data for hydrogen molecular isotopologues (H2, D2, T2, HD, HT, DT) is essential for the interpretation of future burning-fusion plasma spectroscopic diagnostics.

Presenters

  • Keisuke Fujii

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Authors

  • Keisuke Fujii

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Liam H Scarlett

    Curtin University

  • Dmitry V Fursa

    Curtin Univ of Technology

  • Mark C Zammit

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • Kuzmin Arseniy

    Kyoto university

  • Masahiro Kobayashi

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Theodore M Biewer

    ORNL

  • Motoshi Goto

    National Institute for Fusion Science

  • Keiji Sawada

    Shinshu university