336 research outputs found

    Calculating the 3D magnetic field of ITER for European TBM studies

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    The magnetic perturbation due to the ferromagnetic test blanket modules (TBMs) may deteriorate fast ion confinement in ITER. This effect must be quantified by numerical studies in 3D. We have implemented a combined finite element method (FEM) -- Biot-Savart law integrator method (BSLIM) to calculate the ITER 3D magnetic field and vector potential in detail. Unavoidable geometry simplifications changed the mass of the TBMs and ferritic inserts (FIs) up to 26%. This has been compensated for by modifying the nonlinear ferromagnetic material properties accordingly. Despite the simplifications, the computation geometry and the calculated fields are highly detailed. The combination of careful FEM mesh design and using BSLIM enables the use of the fields unsmoothed for particle orbit-following simulations. The magnetic field was found to agree with earlier calculations and revealed finer details. The vector potential is intended to serve as input for plasma shielding calculations.Comment: In proceedings of the 28th Symposium on Fusion Technolog

    Proof-of-principle of parametric stellarator neutronics modeling using Serpent2

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    This contribution presents neutron transport studies for the 5-period helical-axis advanced stellarator stellarator using the Serpent2 code. These studies utilize a parametric geometry model, enabling scans in neutronics modeling by varying the thickness of the reactor layers. For example, the tritium breeding ratio (TBR) can be determined by exploring various blanket material options and thicknesses to identify the threshold configuration that meets the TBR design criterion of 1.15. We found out that with the helium-cooled pebble ped candidate option, the TBR criterion is met with a breeding zone thickness of 26 cm, while with the dual-coolant lithium lead the threshold is exceeded at a thickness of 46 cm. Furthermore, the geometry includes non-planar field coils, allowing to study the fast neutron flux in these superconducting coils with a technological limit of 1 × 10 9 1 / cm 2 s . It is shown that the neutron fast flux is not constant at the coils, necessitating a neutron transport simulation to determine the distribution of the fast-flux at the coils. We show that the peak fast flux can be more than a factor of 2 higher than the average flux, and that the peak flux location rotates helically.</p

    ASCOT orbit-following simulations of ion cyclotron heating with synthetic fast ion loss diagnostic: a first application to ASDEX Upgrade

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    The orbit-following Monte Carlo code ASCOT interfaced with the radiofrequency Monte Carlo library RFOF can simulate radiofrequency heating of ion populations using wave solutions from full-wave solvers such as TORIC. It is applied to the fundamental mode ion cyclotron resonant heating of hydrogen and 2nd harmonic frequency heating of neutral beam injected deuterium in ASDEX Upgrade discharge #33147 to validate the model against fast ion loss detector (FILD) measurements. In addition, for FILD signal simulations requiring enhanced resolution or scanning the effect of various perturbations such as magnetohydrodynamic phenomena near the plasma edge, a two-stage simulation scheme is presented where the fast ion population is first created by a full ASCOT-RFOF ion cyclotron heating simulation, and the resulting distribution is then used as an input to ASCOT's distribution-sampling marker source module for more efficient simulation of the ICRH ion wall load and FILD signal. A satisfactory agreement with the experimentally observed FILD signal is found.</p

    Characterisation of the fast-ion edge resonant transport layer induced by 3D perturbative fields in the ASDEX Upgrade tokamak through full orbit simulations

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    In recent experiments at the ASDEX Upgrade tokamak the existence of an Edge Resonant Transport Layer (ERTL) was revealed as the main transport mechanism responsible for the measured fast-ion losses in the presence of externally applied 3D fields. The Monte Carlo orbit-following code ASCOT was used to study the fast-ion transport including the plasma response calculated with MARS-F, reproducing a strong correlation of fast-ion losses with the poloidal mode spectra of the 3D fields. In this work, a description of the physics underlying the ERTL is presented by means of numerical simulations together with an analytical model and experimental measurements to validate the results. The degradation of fast-ion confinement is calculated in terms of the variation of the toroidal canonical momentum (δPϕ). This analysis reveals resonant patterns at the plasma edge activated by 3D perturbations and emphasizes the relevance of nonlinear resonances. The impact of collisions and the radial electric field on the ERTL is analysed.EUROfusion Consortium 633053French National Research Agency (ANR) ANR-11-IDEX-0001-0
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