Saturated Drift-Cyclotron Loss-Cone (DCLC) Instability in 3D Kinetic-Ion Simulations of WHAM
POSTER
Abstract
The Wisconsin High-Temperature Superconductor Axisymmetric Mirror (WHAM) will form a plasma column of radius ~10 cm, spanning ~2–5 ion Larmor radii. Its small size may induce drift cyclotron loss cone (DCLC) instability: a coupled ion Bernstein / drift wave excited by the plasma's radial density gradient and loss-cone velocity distribution associated with both the magnetic mirror and a self-consistent ambipolar hole. We present 3D plasma simulations, using kinetic (particle-in-cell) ions and isothermal fluid electrons in a hybrid approximation, of various WHAM operating configurations with sloshing (45 deg. pitch angle) beam ion distributions from the collisional Fokker-Planck code CQL3D-m as an initial condition. Edge-localized electrostatic waves grow and saturate in ~1–10 µs with ω ~ 1–3x the ion cyclotron frequency. Wave properties agree with linear theory of DCLC in a planar slab. DCLC scatters ions into the loss cone at a rate balanced by finite outflow time. We will further discuss (i) how DCLC loss rate scales with device parameters, and (ii) ways to mitigate DCLC in WHAM and next-step mirror devices, including the efficacy of trapped warm ions.
*This work was funded by Realta Fusion, DOE, and NSF. This work used computing resources of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), a Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility, using NERSC award FES-ERCAP0026655; Anvil at Purdue University's Rosen Center for Advanced Computing through allocation PHY230179 from the Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program supported by National Science Foundation (NSF) grants #2138259, #2138286, #2138307, #2137603, and #2138296; Amazon Web Services' Compute for Climate Fellowship awarded to Realta Fusion; and UW–Madison's Center for High Throughput Computing.
Presenters
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Aaron Tran
- University of Wisconsin–Madison