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Design of a resilient divertor for HSX

ORAL

Abstract

The Helically Symmetric eXperiment (HSX) is a quasi helically symmetric optimized stellarator at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. To allow higher heating powers, a divertor is required to avoid damage to the vessel wall. Ref. [1] has shown that HSX is suitable for a divertor which is resilient against changes in the magnetic field. This is interesting for future stellarators. Such a resilient divertor is characterized by a stochastic layer between the last closed flux surface (LCFS) and the plasma-facing components. In the current HSX design, there is no space to install such a divertor. Therefore, a complete makeover is proposed. First, a new vessel is designed. Starting from the LCFS, the wall is lofted outwards as much as the coils allow. Field line following with FLARE [2] is used to determine the strike point locations for different equilibria, and shows the resiliency of the strike point location. These locations are used as the initial divertor position and are the starting point of more advanced optimisation using EMC3-Lite [3] and EMC3-EIRENE [4].

[1] Bader, A., et al. Physics of Plasmas 24.3 (2017): 032506., [2] Frerichs, H., et al. Bulletin of the American Physical Society (2015), [3] Feng, Y., et al. Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion 64.12 (2022): 125012., [4] Feng, Y., et al. Contributions to Plasma Physics 54.4‐6 (2014): 426-431.

Presenters

  • Dieter Boeyaert

    Department of Engineering Physics, University of Wisconsin

Authors

  • Dieter Boeyaert

    Department of Engineering Physics, University of Wisconsin

  • John C Schmitt

    Type One Energy, Auburn University, Type One Energy

  • Robert Davies

    Max Planck Institut für Plasmaphysik, Max Planck Institute for Plasms Physics

  • Kelly A Garcia

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Jacob Nesbit

    Physical Sciences Lab, University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Aaron Bader

    University of Wisconsin - Madison, Type One Energy, Type One Energy

  • Heinke G Frerichs

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Benedikt Geiger

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Michael J Gerard

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Sophia A Henneberg

    Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics

  • Mykola Ialovega

    Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of Engineering Physics, University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Kevin Koehler

    Physical Sciences Lab, University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Oliver Schmitz

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Kurt Studt

    Physical Sciences Lab, University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Danah Velez

    University of Wisconsin-Madison