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Disruption event chain analysis of high-radiation and high-density triggered disruptions in NSTX and MAST-U

ORAL

Abstract

The tokamak density limit represents an upper threshold on a critical plasma parameter that must be optimized to maximize fusion energy output without disruption. Many theoretical and empirical models seek to predict density limit disruptions, but none are universally applicable across tokamak configurations. The common thread through disruptive events associated with density limit disruptions (e.g. local cooling, increased radiation or transport, H-L back transition) is loss of energy balance. We hypothesize that high density causes disruptions via multiple physical mechanisms, each exhibiting distinct event chains triggered by local or global energy balance loss. We examine entire tokamak databases using the DECAF (Disruption Event Characterization and Forecasting) code [1] to build event chains in disruptive shots characterized by high density and radiation, focusing on spherical tokamaks NSTX and MAST-U, and comparing with conventional tokamak KSTAR. This multi-machine analysis reveals various event sequences leading to disruption when triggered by elevated density and radiation, demonstrating that multi-physics prediction models are required. Results identify the most common event sequences leading to disruption and their variations across different tokamak configurations. These event chains establish the foundation for developing improved physics-based disruption prediction models through this novel event chain methodology while enhancing our fundamental understanding of the underlying physical mechanisms.

[1] S. A. Sabbagh et al., Phys. Plasmas 30 (2023) 032506; doi: 10.1063/5.0133825

Presenters

  • Frederick Sheehan

    Columbia University

Authors

  • Frederick Sheehan

    Columbia University

  • Steven A Sabbagh

    Columbia U. / PPPL, Columbia University

  • Guillermo Bustos-Ramirez

    Columbia University

  • Joseph R Jepson

    Columbia University

  • Hankyu Lee

    Columbia University

  • Grant Tillinghast

    Columbia University

  • Matthew Tobin

    Columbia University

  • Juan D Riquezes

    Columbia University

  • Veronika Zamkovska

    Columbia University

  • Christopher Ham

    Culham Science Centre

  • James R Harrison

    United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

  • Jayhyun Kim

    Korea Institute of Fusion Energy

  • Young-Seok Park

    Korea Institute of Fusion Energy