High-Z impurity transport and control in advanced tokamak scenarios on DIII-D

ORAL

Abstract

We report the first experimental evidence of active high-Z impurity expulsion in DIII-D high-performance (βN>3.5) hybrid plasmas with low rotation and small ELMs. Detailed analysis shows that core and pedestal impurity transport is dominated by strong outward neoclassical convection, where ion temperature screening (∇Ti) dominates the main ion density gradient-driven pinch (∇ni), combined with enhanced turbulent diffusion, producing flat/hollow impurity profiles. This provides a critical solution for tungsten first-wall compatibility in DIII-D. In contrast, NBI-driven high-density, high-βP scenarios exhibit impurity accumulation coinciding with: (1) density ITB formation, (2) increased toroidal rotation from enhanced torque, and (3) plasma performance degradation. TGLF/NEO modeling identifies the accumulation mechanism as strong neoclassical inward convection from high density gradients, further amplified by rotation-induced poloidal asymmetries in impurity density.



Acknowledgements: Supported in part by the US Department of Energy under DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-SC0010685, DE-AC52-07NA27344, DE-AC02-09CH11466 and DE-SC0020287.

*Supported in part by the US Department of Energy under DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-SC0010685, DE-AC52-07NA27344, DE-AC02-09CH11466 and DE-SC0020287.

Presenters

  • Shengyu shi

    • Oak Ridge Associated Universities

Authors

  • Shengyu shi

    • Oak Ridge Associated Universities
  • S. Ding

    • General Atomics
    • General Atomics, San Diego, CA, United States of America
  • Tomas Odstrcil

    • General Atomics
  • Brian S Victor

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • A Stephane BIWOLE

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, MA, United States of America
  • Andrea M. MV Garofalo

    • General Atomics
  • Huiqian Wang

    • General Atomics
  • Jeff B Lestz

    • General Atomics
  • Qiming Hu

    • Princeton University
    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL)
  • Joseph T McClenaghan

    • General Atomics
  • Auna Louise Moser

    • General Atomics
  • Bart G.P. Van Compernolle

    • General Atomics
  • Lothar W Schmitz

    • University of California, Los Angeles