Runaway electrons in SPARC

ORAL

Abstract

We explore the evolution and diagnosis of post-disruption runaway electrons (REs) in the SPARC V0 tokamak design [1]. The RE problem may be worsened by high plasma currents ($I_p\sim$~7.5~MA) better confining REs, and compact size ($R_0\sim$~1.65~m, $a\sim$~0.5 m) leading to faster current quench times. However, the high magnetic field ($B_0\sim$~12~T) will increase synchrotron power loss, $>5\times$ higher than ITER. The code GO [2] is used to model the electric field and RE current profiles during realistic SPARC disruption scenarios. Scans are performed in post-disruption plasma temperature, thermal quench time, and pre-disruption elongation. The kinetic equation solver CODE [3] is used to evolve the RE momentum space distribution function, giving expected energies of the RE plateau. Recent findings from \emph{quiescent} RE experiments in Alcator C-Mod indicate that the spectra, polarization, and images of RE synchrotron radiation can give insight into RE energy, pitch angle, and spatial distributions, respectively [4-6].\newline [1] Greenwald 2018 PSFC/RR-18-2 [2] Smith 2006 PoP 13 [3] Landreman 2014 CPC 185 [4] Tinguely 2018 NF 58 [5] Tinguely 2019 NF accepted [6] Tinguely 2018 PPCF 60

*Supported by US DOE grants DE-FC02-99ER54512 and DE-SC0014664, Vetenskapsr{\aa}det Dnr 2014-5510, and European Research Council ERC-2014-CoG grant 647121.

Authors

  • RA Tinguely

    • 1) MIT, PSFC, USA
    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
  • P Svensson

    • Chalmers University
  • M Hoppe

    • Chalmers University of Technology
    • Chalmers University
  • O Embreus

    • Chalmers University of Technology
    • Chalmers University
  • T Fulop

    • Chalmers University of Technology
    • Chalmers University
  • S Newton

    • Culham Centre for Fusion Energy
  • A. Creely

    • Commonwealth Fusion Systems
    • CFS
  • R Sweeney

    • MIT
    • MIT-ORISE
    • MIT PSFC
  • Robert Granetz

    • MIT PSFC
    • MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology