Effect of Neutral Beam Parameters on Prompt Losses in Tokamaks
POSTER
Abstract
First orbit, or prompt losses occur when an injected neutral atom ionizes such that its first poloidal transit intersects a limiter surface. The heat load from these losses can affect diagnostic components near the first wall. We are developing a code that calculates where prompt losses reach the wall of the DIII-D tokamak as a function of plasma parameters including 3D beam geometry. This code also serves as a synthetic diagnostic for the Fast Ion Loss Detector system. Using magnetic equilibria and beam energies from DIII-D discharges, the pitch angle and density of neutral particles ionized along the beam path are determined and used to calculate ion trajectories, resulting in a map of prompt loss flux to the wall. A modeling study is performed to determine prompt loss versus beam energy. Initial results focus on whether it is possible to shift an existing prompt loss heat load away from a motional Stark effect diagnostic by increasing the energy of the source beam.
*Work supported in part by the US Department of Energy under DE-FG02-94ER54235, DE-FC02-04ER54698 and the National Undergraduate Fellowship in Fusion Science and Engineering.