Impact of RMP ELM Suppression On Divertor Heat and Particle Fluxes at ITER-like Condition

POSTER

Abstract

RMP ELM suppression experiments at ITER-like conditions (shape, collisionality, RMP spectrum) in DIII-D show little splitting of the heat flux to the divertor targets, despite robust splitting in the particle flux. In DIII-D, strike point splitting is routinely observed in the divertor particle flux during RMP operation. The observed splitting is consistent with the toroidal mode number n of the perturbation, but the measured separation of the divertor particle flux lobes exceeds predictions of a vacuum model by factors of 3-5. However, there is little impact of these particle flux lobes on the measured divertor heat flux. The large particle flux lobe separations present a challenge for plasma response modeling, because the predicted response using linear, resistive MHD simulations is dominantly a screening response, which should reduce the divertor lobe splitting below the vacuum model predictions.

*This work is supported by the US DOE under DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-FG02-07ER54917, DE-SC0018030 and DE-FG02-05ER54809.

Presenters

  • Dmitriy M Orlov

    • Univ of California - San Diego

Authors

  • Dmitriy M Orlov

    • Univ of California - San Diego
  • R.A. A Moyer

    • Univ of California - San Diego
    • University of California San Diego
    • UCSD
  • Igor Bykov

    • Univ of California - San Diego
  • Todd E Evans

    • General Atomics - San Diego
    • General Atomics
  • Brendan C Lyons

    • General Atomics - San Diego
    • General Atomics
  • Abraham Meles Teklu

    • Oregon State University
  • Gregorio Luigi L Trevisan

    • Oak Ridge Assoc Univ
    • Oak Ridge Associated Universities, General Atomics
  • Andreas Wingen

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    • Oak Ridge National Lab