Boundary condition effects on Runaway Electron Mitigation Coil modeling for the SPARC and DIII-D tokamaks

Abstract Extended-MHD modeling of planned runaway electron mitigation coils (REMC) for SPARC and DIII-D is performed with the NIMROD code. A coil has been designed for each machine, with the two differing in shape and location, but both having n=1 symmetry (with n the toroidal mode number). Compared...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inNuclear fusion
Main Authors Izzo, Valerie A., Battey, Alexander Franklin, Tinguely, Roy Alexander, Sweeney, Ryan, Hansen, Christopher J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States IOP Science 09.04.2024
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Summary:Abstract Extended-MHD modeling of planned runaway electron mitigation coils (REMC) for SPARC and DIII-D is performed with the NIMROD code. A coil has been designed for each machine, with the two differing in shape and location, but both having n=1 symmetry (with n the toroidal mode number). Compared to previous modeling efforts, three improvements are made to the simulations boundary conditions. First a resistive wall model is used in place of an ideal wall. Second, the ThinCurr code is used to compute the time-dependent 3D fields used as magnetic boundary conditions for the simulations. Third, the simulation boundary is moved from the the first-wall location to the vacuum vessel (VV), which extends the boundary past the location of the internal REMC. To remove the 3D coil from the simulation domain, an equivalent set of 3D fields is calculated at the VV boundary that produce approximately the same field distribution at the last closed flux surface assuming vacuum between the two. Each of these three boundary condition improvements leads to an improvement in the predicted performance of the REMC for both machines. The resistive wall alone primarily effects the resonance of the coil with the plasma after the TQ, affecting the q-profile evolution in the SPARC modeling, and allowing the applied spectrum to be modified in response to the plasma in the DIII-D modeling. The movement of the simulation boundary has the most significant effect on the RE confinement overall, including in the early stages, particularly for a DIII-D inner wall limited equilibrium, where the RE loss fraction increases from 90% to >99%, with SPARC RE losses also occurring much earlier when the boundary is placed at the VV.
Bibliography:USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES). Scientific User Facilities (SUF)
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Fusion Energy Sciences (FES)
FC02-04ER54698; FG02-95ER54309; AC02-05CH11231
ISSN:0029-5515
1741-4326