Quantifying impurity transport in runaway electron plateaus in DIII-D

ORAL

Abstract

The impurity ion diffusion coefficient in post-disruption runaway electron (RE) plateaus is found to be about 10x higher than classical ion-ion diffusion. The impurity level of RE plateaus has a key role in all aspects of RE plateau dynamics, and is crucial for predicting damage resulting from RE plateau-wall strikes. DIII-D experiments have pursued both stationary and dynamic measurement of RE plateau impurity radial transport. In the stationary experiments, profiles of electron density and radiated power are matched with a 1D radial impurity transport model. This steady-state 1D analysis arrives at impurity ion diffusion coefficients of order 1 - 10 m2/s. Dynamic experiments use small (1 Torr-L), carbon granules fired into the RE plateau, with subsequent toroidal and radial transport of  ions analyzed spectroscopically. The dynamic experiments, performed in a small number of conditions, find impurity diffusion coefficients of order 5 m2/s, consistent with the steady-state estimates. Future experiments and implications for ITER will be discussed.

*Supported by the US DOE under DE-FG02-07ER54917, DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-AC05-00OR22725, DE-AC52-07NA27344, DE-FG02-04ER54744, DE-AC02-09CH11466, and DE-AC05-06OR23100.

Presenters

  • Eric M Hollmann

    • University of California, San Diego

Authors

  • Eric M Hollmann

    • University of California, San Diego
  • Claudio Marini

    • Oak Ridge Assoc Univ
    • University of California, San Diego
  • Zana Popovic

    • University of California - San Diego
  • Dmitry L Rudakov

    • UCSD
    • University of California San Diego
    • UC San Diego
    • University of California, San Diego
  • Jeffery Herfindal

    • Oak Ridge National Lab
    • Oak Ridge National Lab.
    • ORNL
  • Daisuke Shiraki

    • Oak Ridge National Lab
    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Alessandro Bortolo

    • PPPL
  • Florian Effenberg

    • PPPL
  • Adam G McLean

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
    • Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
    • LLNL
  • Nicholas Eidietis

    • General Atomics
    • GA
  • Andrey Lvovskiy

    • General Atomics
    • General Atomics - San Diego
  • Carlos Paz-Soldan

    • Columbia University, New York City
    • Columbia University
    • Columbia