Initial results from divertor heat-flux instrumentation on Alcator C-Mod

POSTER

Abstract

Physics-based plasma transport models that can accurately simulate the heat-flux power widths observed in the tokamak boundary are lacking at the present time. Yet this quantity is of fundamental importance for ITER and most critically important for DEMO, a reactor similar to ITER but with $\sim $4 times the power exhaust. In order to improve our understanding, C-Mod, DIII-D and NSTX will aim experiments in FY10 towards characterizing the divertor ``footprint'' and its connection to conditions ``upstream'' in the boundary and core plasmas [2]. Standard IR-based heat-flux measurements are particularly difficult in C-Mod, due to its vertical-oriented divertor targets. To overcome this, a suite of embedded heat-flux sensor probes (tile thermocouples, calorimeters, surface thermocouples) combined with IR thermography was installed during the FY09 opening, along with a new divertor bolometer system. This paper will report on initial experiments aimed at unfolding the heat-flux dependencies on plasma operating conditions. [2] a proposed US DoE Joint Facilities Milestone.

*USDOE Coop. Agree. No. DE-FC02-99ER54512.

Authors

  • Brian LaBombard

    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
    • PSFC MIT
    • MIT-PSFC
    • MIT PSFC
  • D. Brunner

  • J. Payne

  • M. Reinke

  • J.L. Terry

  • J.W. Hughes

  • B. Lipschultz

  • D. Whyte

    • MIT PSFC