Collaborations on Long-Pulse Tungsten-Compatible Steady-State Scenarios between DIII-D and KSTAR
ORAL
Abstract
A joint activity has been initiated between the DIII-D and KSTAR programs to develop long-pulse, tungsten-compatible, steady-state scenarios for future tokamaks. This balanced partnership includes shared run-time and a joint team for planning, experiments, and data analysis. For the FY24-25 campaigns, DIII-D has allocated dedicated run days, with a parallel program prepared on KSTAR.
As the first step, the KSTAR team joined DIII-D experiments on-site, successfully conducting experiments on hybrid and high-βp scenarios under KSTAR constraints, such as a new plasma shape on the tungsten divertor, limited ramp-up rate of plasma current for the superconducting magnet, and the maximum available heating and current drives. Concurrently, KSTAR has entered a new experimental phase by commissioning a newly installed lower tungsten divertor during the 2023 campaign, which benefits DIII-D-compatible high-performance lower single null scenarios.
The next step involves joint experiments on KSTAR, focusing on longer pulse operations of KSTAR-compatible hybrid and high-βp scenarios derived from DIII-D. Subsequent campaigns will further investigate these scenarios on both programs. In this presentation, we will introduce recent progress and outcomes from these collaborative activities, highlighting advances and future directions.
As the first step, the KSTAR team joined DIII-D experiments on-site, successfully conducting experiments on hybrid and high-βp scenarios under KSTAR constraints, such as a new plasma shape on the tungsten divertor, limited ramp-up rate of plasma current for the superconducting magnet, and the maximum available heating and current drives. Concurrently, KSTAR has entered a new experimental phase by commissioning a newly installed lower tungsten divertor during the 2023 campaign, which benefits DIII-D-compatible high-performance lower single null scenarios.
The next step involves joint experiments on KSTAR, focusing on longer pulse operations of KSTAR-compatible hybrid and high-βp scenarios derived from DIII-D. Subsequent campaigns will further investigate these scenarios on both programs. In this presentation, we will introduce recent progress and outcomes from these collaborative activities, highlighting advances and future directions.
*This research was supported by R&D Program of "KSTAR Experimental Collaboration and Fusion Plasma Research (EN2401-15)" through the Korea Institute of Fusion Energy (KFE) funded by the Government funds, Republic of Korea. This material is based upon work partially supported by the Department of Energy under Award Number(s) DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-AC0209CH11466, DE-AC05-00OR22725, DE-FG02-04ER54761.
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Presenters
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Jinil Chung
- Korea Institute of Fusion Energy