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Detached divertor operation in DIII-D's new compact Shape and Volume Rise divertor

POSTER

Abstract

Experiments on the DIII-D tokamak achieved detached divertor conditions in the new compact Shape and Volume Rise (SVR) divertor by increasing deuterium fueling (plasma density) or extrinsic nitrogen seeding, across a range of operational scenarios with concurrent modeling. Variables explored include toroidal field direction, fueling location (main chamber vs private flux region), and heating strategy (stationary vs. ramped power to mitigate pedestal degradation). The resulting dataset is used to (1) assess detachment effects on pedestal and core plasma performance, (2) identify strategies to better integrate cold, detached divertor conditions with high-performance pedestals in shallow divertor geometries like the SVR, and (3) validate edge modeling codes such as SOLPS-ITER, enhancing their predictive power for divertor design in future tokamaks. The DIII-D program is testing a compact divertor geometry designed for high-performance pedestal operation. This geometry enables larger core plasma volumes, higher plasma currents, and thus higher absolute divertor densities and pressures, approaching the values expected in FPPs. However, its reduced divertor volume also brings the X-point closer to the divertor targets, raising the risk of unacceptable core degradation during detachment. This study presents preliminary results from dedicated DIII-D experiments, supported by SOLPS-ITER simulations.

Presenters

  • Roberto Maurizio

    General Atomics

Authors

  • Roberto Maurizio

    General Atomics

  • KyuBeen Kwon

    Oak Ridge Associated Universities

  • Adam G McLean

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • Theresa M Wilks

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Thomas H Osborne

    General Atomics

  • Tyler B Cote

    General Atomics

  • Ryan T Hood

    Sandia National Laboratories

  • Alan Hyatt

    General Atomics

  • Mihir D Pandya

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Filippo Scotti

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • Morgan Shafer

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • R. S Wilcox

    ORNL