Physics-Based Integrated Modeling and Exploration of Fusion Performance in SPARC Plasmas

ORAL

Abstract

SPARC is designed to be a high-field, medium-size machine (v0 parameters: B=12T, R=1.65m) aimed at achieving net energy gain with ICRF as its primary heating mechanism. Empirical predictions with conservative physics (H98=1.0) indicate that SPARC baseline plasmas will generate more than 50MW of fusion power, reaching $Q>2$. To build confidence that SPARC will realize its mission, physics-based integrated modeling has been performed. The TRANSP code coupled with the physics-based TGLF turbulence model confirms $Q>2$ operation is feasible for SPARC parameters. In this analysis, ion cyclotron waves are simulated with the full wave TORIC code and alpha heating is included with the Monte-Carlo fast ion NUBEAM module. Exploration of the parameter space also indicates that Q can be enhanced with small variations from baseline, providing a pathway to increase performance while moving away from stability boundaries. This talk presents the workflow to study SPARC plasmas, discusses assumptions and introduces trends of performance against geometric and engineering parameters.

*Research supported by Commonwealth Fusion Systems.

Authors

  • P. Rodriguez-Fernandez

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • PSFC
    • MIT-PSFC
    • MIT
  • N. Howard

    • MIT - PSFC
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • PSFC
    • MIT-PSFC
    • MIT
  • M. Greenwald

    • MIT
    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
    • MIT-PSFC
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • J.W. Hughes

    • MIT-PSFC
    • MIT
    • MIT PSFC
    • Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT
  • A. Creely

    • Commonwealth Fusion Systems
    • CFS
  • Chris Holland

    • University of California, San Diego
    • UC San Diego
    • UCSD
    • University of California-San Diego
  • John Wright

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
    • MIT-PSFC
  • Stephen Wukitch

    • MIT-PSFC