Analysis of W erosion and migration in the DIII-D SAS-VW divertor using GITR and comparison with optical emission spectroscopy
ORAL
Abstract
A case study was performed on W erosion and migration in the SAS-VW divertor on DIII-D. The study is specific to an upper single-null magnetic equilibrium with the OSP on the progressive angle of the W side of the divertor, a Bx▽B drift towards the divertor, and the reported plasma parameters. Gross W erosion along the W surface was estimated using emission spectroscopy data and results from a 3D Monte Carlo transport code, GITR. Both experimental shots yielded a somewhat constant gross W erosion flux estimate of ≈1e18 m−2s−1. Meanwhile, GITR simulation results yielded fluxes of 4.67e17, 1.42e19, and 1.53e19 m−2s−1 for spectroscopic Views 1, 2, and 3 respectively. The GITR simulation may be under-predicting W erosion in View 1 due to a simple sheath model and is otherwise over-predicting W gross erosion by a factor of 10. Sheath physics dominates W transport and redeposition near the surface; ionization in the Chodura and Debye sheaths is a good predictor for prompt redeposition. A series of simulations with varying permutations of forces turned on were performed to investigate W migration away from the surface. The fraction of simulated W impurities that escape the sheath are driven into the private plasma by the ExB drift, and driven further into the slot toward the vertex by Fokker-Planck collisional friction forces. This case study is the first of four that will demonstrate the impact of Bx▽B drift direction and strikepoint selection on W gross erosion, local redeposition trends, and overall leakage out of the divertor.
*This work contributes to the Plasma Surface Interactions 2 project, which is part of the Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) program, and is jointly sponsored by the Fusion Energy Sciences (FES) and Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) programs within the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science. This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Fusion Energy Sciences, using the DIII-D National Fusion Facility, a DOE Office of Science user facility, under Awards DE-FC02-04ER54698.
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Publication: Planned paper submission to Nuclear Fusion
Presenters
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Alyssa L Hayes
- University of Tennessee