Predicting Accessibility to the High-β<sub>p</sub> Regime in Negative Triangularity Plasmas
POSTER
Abstract
We study accessibility to the high βp regimes using negative triangularity (NT) plasmas on DIII-D to address magnetic confinement fusion's major challenge: maximizing core fusion performance while keeping power exhaust below damage thresholds. High βp scenarios maximize energy confinement using internal transport barriers (ITBs) reaching H98,y2 ≃1.5 at Greenwald fraction exceeding unity, while NT configurations reduce power exhaust constraints while maintaining H-mode confinement. Combining high βp with NT plasmas would enable simultaneous high fusion performance with benign, ELM-free edges. This computational study uses FUSE for rapid parameter exploration to find optimal discharge parameters for high βp NT plasmas. A diverted NT DIII-D discharge serves as the base case with variations in Zeff, auxiliary power, plasma current, line-averaged density, core rotation, and confining magnetic field. FUSE self-consistently calculates plasma profiles by iteratively solving turbulent transport (TGLF) and equilibrium (TEQUILA). The reduced model TGLF-NN, trained on DIII-D data, enables exploration of 500 configurations, computing cases in 1-2 minutes each for ~16 cpu-hours total, achievable in hours through parallel execution on laptop hardware. Preliminary results show access to βp > 2.5 is restricted to Ip ≤ 0.9 MA and has no dependence on line-averaged density ne. Future work will determine accessibility for future fusion reactor conditions.
Presenters
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Francisco David Munguia Wulftange
University of California, San Diego
Authors
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Francisco David Munguia Wulftange
University of California, San Diego
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Alessandro Marinoni
University of California San Diego
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Tim Slendebroek
University of California, San Diego, General Atomics
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Orso-Maria OM Meneghini
General Atomics
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Tom F Neiser
General Atomics