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Overview of progress in establishing the plasma basis of STEP

ORAL

Abstract

The Spherical Tokamak for Energy Production (STEP) program has provided a conceptual design for a prototype steady-state fusion power plant targeting the year 2040 [1]. External heating and current drive (CD) is either pure electron cyclotron CD (ECCD) or a mix of ECCD and electron Bernstein wave CD (EBCD). EBCD is projected to have normalized efficiency three times higher than ECCD, providing possible access to Qfus = Pfus/Paux ~ 30 [1]. The published design point (SPP-001) [1], with geometric major radius Rgeo = 3.6m, aspect ratio A = 1.8, toroidal field Bt(Rgeo) = 3.2T and fusion power Pfus ~ 1.5-1.8GW, is technically challenging due to constraints on the inner build radius. This has led to a program pivot to a larger design (SPP-002) with Rgeo = 4.3m but the same A and Pfus. I will report on recent work to extend the physics basis, explore control strategies [2], and develop whole-pulse operating scenarios. In integrated modeling Bohm/gyro-Bohm transport is scaled to achieve the desired Pfus. The scenario space is constrained by seven other conditions, e.g. a maximum divertor head load and Qfus > 10. Gyrokinetic simulations show that the transport is dominated by hybrid kinetic ballooning modes [3]: the corresponding heat fluxes are sustainable in the presence of modest flow shear. α-particles do not drive toroidal Alfvén eigenmodes in these design points.

[1] H Meyer Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A 382, 20230406 (2024)

[2] M Lennholm Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A 382, 20230403 (2024)

[3] D Kennedy et al. Nucl. Fusion 63, 126061 (2023)

Presenters

  • Ken McClements

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

Authors

  • Ken McClements

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • Hendrik Meyer

    United Kingdom Industrial Fusion Solutions Ltd

  • Francis J Casson

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, Culham Campus, Abingdon, UK

  • Neil Conway

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • Simon Freethy

    Culham Centre for Fusion Energy (CCFE), United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • Tim C Hender

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • Mark A Henderson

    United Kingdom Industrial Fusion Solutions Ltd

  • Krassimir Kirov

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, Culham Campus, Abingdon, UK, UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA)

  • Morten Lennholm

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • John Morris

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • Colin M Roach

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • Samuli Saarelma

    UKAEA, United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • Daniel Valcarcel

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority