Simulations of divertor target material composition during tokamak plasma operation with continuous boron powder injection
POSTER
Abstract
Powder injection may be an effective method to continuously condition fusion device walls during operation. A key scientific question regarding real-time wall conditioning is the feasibility of maintaining a surface layer of injected material (e.g., boron) on a PFC substrate (e.g., carbon or tungsten) while it is undergoing erosion and redeposition. To address this issue, experiments with real-time wall conditioning by boron powder injection have recently been performed in DIII-D [1], which will be interpreted by means of multi-scale numerical simulations. Detailed calculations of the plasma sheath and surface composition resulting from the boron impurity flux on a divertor target will be presented. Impurity fluxes are calculated using the coupled codes UEDGE and DUSTT for plasma edge and dust physics, respectively. The particle-in-cell code hPIC is coupled to the binary collision approximation code F-TRIDYN to determine the surface response and the impurity flux implantation. Simulated material composition of the target after real-time boronization will be presented.
[1] Bortolon et al. this conference
*Research supported by the US Department of Energy under DE-SC0018141 and DE-FC02-04ER54698
Presenters
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Jon T Drobny
- Univ of Illinois - Urbana