Optimizing Particle Transport for Enhanced Confinement in Quasi-Isodynamic Stellarators
ORAL
Abstract
Despite significant advances in reducing turbulent heat losses, modern quasi-isodynamic (QI) stellarators - such as Stellaris - continue to suffer from poor particle confinement, which fundamentally limits their overall performance. Using gyrokinetic simulations within the GENE–Tango framework, we identify suppressed inward thermodiffusion, caused by unfavorable magnetic geometry, as the primary cause. To overcome this limitation, we design a new configuration with a reduced mirror ratio, which enhances the contribution of passing electrons to the inward particle flux. This facilitates the formation of strongly peaked density profiles, suppresses turbulence, and leads to a substantial improvement in confinement. Our optimized configuration achieves nearly a twofold increase in energy confinement compared to Stellaris, highlighting the crucial role of optimizing particle transport in next-generation stellarator designs.
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Publication: Optimizing Particle Transport for Enhanced Confinement in Quasi-Isodynamic Stellarators, to be submitted to PRL
Presenters
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Frank Jenko
University of Texas at Austin
Authors
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Frank Jenko
University of Texas at Austin
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Alejandro B Bañón Navarro
Max-Planck-Institute for Plasma Physics (IPP Garching), Max-Planck-Institute for Plasma Physics, Garching
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Andrea Merlo
Proxima Fusion
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Emanuel Laude
Proxima Fusion
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Alessandro Di Siena
Max-Planck-Institute for Plasma Physics (IPP Garching)