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3D Disruption Radiation Modeling and Considerations for SPARC Bolometry Design

ORAL

Abstract

At peak performance, SPARC plasmas will reach higher thermal stored energy density than previous tokamaks, over 1MJ/m3. The release of this energy on thermal quench timescales of a millisecond or less risks melt damage. Disruptions on SPARC will be mitigated through Massive Gas Injection (MGI). MGI performance will be evaluated using a dedicated set of 60 toroidally spaced bolometer arrays deployed to measure disruption radiation. Bolometer designs are tested against virtual disruption radiation from M3D-C1 and NIMROD MGI simulations. Virtual radiation is observed in the Cherab synthetic diagnostic framework to produce synthetic bolometry measurements, as well as local radiation intensities on plasma facing components. Radiation structure reconstruction is conducted through Emis3D to ensure that disruption radiated power and peaking factors can be accurately determined from planned bolometer sightlines. The addition of toroidal bolometer sightlines is found to improve toroidal peaking factor measurement accuracy during the pre-thermal quench in single-injector MGI mitigation.

Presenters

  • Benjamin Stein-Lubrano

    MIT PSFC

Authors

  • Benjamin Stein-Lubrano

    MIT PSFC

  • Ryan M Sweeney

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems, CFS, MIT PSFC, Commonwealth Fusion System

  • Rebecca Li

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems

  • Jacob Rabinowitz

    Columbia University

  • Nathaniel M Ferraro

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • Robert S Granetz

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Valerie Izzo

    Fiat Lux LLC

  • Andreas Kleiner

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • Jack J Lovell

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Earl Marmar

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Matthew L Reinke

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems, CFS

  • John E Rice

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT