Helium enrichment and tritium burn efficiency in simulations of divertor plasmas

POSTER

Abstract

The connection between projected fusion reactor performance and helium enrichment in the edge plasma is explored using the plasma edge code SOLPS-ITER. Recently, it was proposed that the tritium usage in steady state, equilibrated fusion reactors could be characterized by a generic, dimensionless figure of merit: the “Tritium Burn Efficiency”, or “TBE” [1] which connects the reactor performance with the permitted helium gas fraction in the divertor. This study addresses the applicability of TBE for characterizing fusion devices through evaluation of helium transport and enrichment in the divertor plasma, in both existing experiments and for next-step devices. Existing impurity enrichment studies using injected helium performed on the DIII-D tokamak with induced scrape-off layer flows at various puffing/pumping speeds are modeled using SOLPS-ITER, matching reported experimental conditions [2] to assess the validity of the helium physics models in the code. A helium enrichment value defined as fHe,exh/fHe,core of 1.0 is achieved in the simulation, in good agreement with the reported value of 1.1 in the experiment. This simulation acts as a validated baseline for further physics studies on divertor helium enrichment in the DIII-D tokamak as an injected impurity and the next-generation fusion device SPARC as fusion-born alpha particles.

[1] D.G. Whyte et al 2023 Nucl. Fusion 63 126019

[2] M.R. Wade et al 1998 Nucl. Fusion 38 1839

*This research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Fusion Energy Sciences Postdoctoral Research Program administered by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE) for the DOE. ORISE is managed by Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU) under DOE contract number DE-SC0014664. All opinions expressed in this paper are the author's and do not necessarily reflect the policies and views of DOE, ORAU, or ORISE.

Presenters

  • Rebecca L Masline

    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Rebecca L Masline

    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Michael Robert Knox Wigram

    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
  • Sean B Ballinger

    • MIT PSFC
    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
  • Haosheng Wu

    • Politecnico di Torino
  • Dennis G Whyte

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT