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Progress at DIII-D toward predicting wall damage in ITER from post-disruption low-Z vs high-Z runaway electron wall impact

POSTER

Abstract

Predicting whether low-resistivity ("low-Z") or high-resistivity ("high-Z") runaway electron (RE) beams will tend cause more wall damage is crucial for ITER to optimize its disruption mitigation strategy. Experiments at DIII-D have attempted to measure the kinetic energy and pitch angle of REs striking the wall during the post-disruption loss event of large (>250 kA) RE beams, both using IR data analysis and using a sacrificial limiter probe. Preliminary data suggests that the range of wall-striking RE pitch angles is 0.2 – 0.4 radians while the range of wall-striking kinetic energies is 2 – 5 MeV. These values are similar to estimated pre-loss values, consistent with full orbit simulations, which indicate that REs increase pitch angle slightly and do not change kinetic energy significantly during the loss process. The RE wetted area during the loss process appears to be significantly (~5x) larger for low-Z RE beams when compared with high-Z RE beams. This trend can be qualitatively captured by RE full orbit simulations when scaling to measured MHD instability amplitudes. Using present best guesses for the ITER RE parameter ranges, basic 1D heat deposition simulations suggest that low-Z RE impact will have a lower probability of causing cooling channel failure than high-Z RE impact.

Presenters

  • Eric M Hollmann

    University of California, San Diego

Authors

  • Eric M Hollmann

    University of California, San Diego

  • Claudio Marini

    University of California, San Diego

  • Shawn Wenjie Tang

    University of California, San Diego

  • Dmitry L Rudakov

    UCSD, University of California, San Diego

  • Jeffrey L Herfindal

    ORNL

  • Daisuke Shiraki

    Oak Ridge National Lab, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, General Atomics - San Diego

  • Matthew T Beidler

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Yueqiang Liu

    General Atomics - San Diego

  • Igor Bykov

    General Atomics

  • Nicholas W Eidietis

    General Atomics

  • Charles J Lasnier

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

  • Jun Ren

    University of Tennessee – Knoxville, General Atomics - San Diego

  • Carlos A Paz-Soldan

    Columbia University

  • Richard A Pitts

    ITER, ITER IO