Electron Cyclotron (EC) waves will be routinely used in future reactors not only for plasma heating and/or non-inductive current drive during the flat top but also to assist the plasma start-up phase in large tokamaks with superconductive coils. In ITER, for example, EC start-up is foreseen since first plasma operation. To limit the level of stray radiation, ECRH can be used after ohmic breakdown, as a robust solution to successfully sustain the plasma burn-through in the presence of pre-filling gas and impurity influx from the wall. On ASDEX Upgrade (AUG), a series of dedicated experiments have been performed using EC heating (X2) with a controlled Ne impurity injection in the prefill phase, to mimic non-favourable burn-through conditions such as would be expected in a discharge following a disruption event. The time for EC heating onset has been optimised to assist the early burn-through and a scan of the Ne concentration has been performed to find the threshold for successful burn-through conditions for two ECH power levels (0.7 and 1.4 MW). The toroidal magnetic field flexibility has been also documented, with the cold resonance position being shifted up to 13 % in major radius to match the ITER condition. These experiments showed that optimised settings of ECH power (onset and duration of the pulse) have a key role in making feasible the early Ne burn-through (with Ne concentration up to 14% and EC power of 1.4 MW). Successful pulses will be extended to study stationarity and clean up properties. For an eficient and robust use of such a technique, it is essential to develop appropriate models capable of describing present experiments and of extrapolating (or predicting) to future scenarios. In this work, the predictive 0D model for the burn-though phase BKD0 [1] has been used to reproduce experimental results and estimate the power required for a successful burn-through as a function of the impurity concentration, finding that ECH power of 1.4 MW is required to sustain burn-through with more than 20% of Ne. The scalability of the model has been also tested on TCV [2] and its implication for ITER will be discussed.

Development of ECRH-based methods for assisted discharge burn-through: experiment and simulation

Ricci D;Figini L;Granucci G;
2023

Abstract

Electron Cyclotron (EC) waves will be routinely used in future reactors not only for plasma heating and/or non-inductive current drive during the flat top but also to assist the plasma start-up phase in large tokamaks with superconductive coils. In ITER, for example, EC start-up is foreseen since first plasma operation. To limit the level of stray radiation, ECRH can be used after ohmic breakdown, as a robust solution to successfully sustain the plasma burn-through in the presence of pre-filling gas and impurity influx from the wall. On ASDEX Upgrade (AUG), a series of dedicated experiments have been performed using EC heating (X2) with a controlled Ne impurity injection in the prefill phase, to mimic non-favourable burn-through conditions such as would be expected in a discharge following a disruption event. The time for EC heating onset has been optimised to assist the early burn-through and a scan of the Ne concentration has been performed to find the threshold for successful burn-through conditions for two ECH power levels (0.7 and 1.4 MW). The toroidal magnetic field flexibility has been also documented, with the cold resonance position being shifted up to 13 % in major radius to match the ITER condition. These experiments showed that optimised settings of ECH power (onset and duration of the pulse) have a key role in making feasible the early Ne burn-through (with Ne concentration up to 14% and EC power of 1.4 MW). Successful pulses will be extended to study stationarity and clean up properties. For an eficient and robust use of such a technique, it is essential to develop appropriate models capable of describing present experiments and of extrapolating (or predicting) to future scenarios. In this work, the predictive 0D model for the burn-though phase BKD0 [1] has been used to reproduce experimental results and estimate the power required for a successful burn-through as a function of the impurity concentration, finding that ECH power of 1.4 MW is required to sustain burn-through with more than 20% of Ne. The scalability of the model has been also tested on TCV [2] and its implication for ITER will be discussed.
2023
Istituto per la Scienza e Tecnologia dei Plasmi - ISTP
Inglese
21st joint workshop on electron cyclotron emission (ECE) and electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH)
277
02001-1
02001-6
6
https://www.epj-conferences.org/articles/epjconf/abs/2023/03/epjconf_ec212023_02001/epjconf_ec212023_02001.html
EDP Sciences
Les Ulis Cedex
FRANCIA
20-24 June 2022
Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France
ECRH
discharge recovery
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). This work has been carried out within the framework of the EUROfusion Consortium, funded by the European Union via the Euratom Research and Training Programme (Grant Agreement No 101052200 - EUROfusion).
9
open
Ricci, D; Stober, J; Dux, R; Figini, L; Wauters, T; Lerche, E; Granucci, G; the ASDEX Upgrade, Team; Eurofusion WPTE, Team
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
   Implementation of activities described in the Roadmap to Fusion during Horizon 2020 through a Joint programme of the members of the EUROfusion consortium
   EUROfusion
   H2020
   633053
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/434642
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