Impurity Transport in a Simulated Gas Target Divertor

2000 
Future generation fusion reactors and tokamaks will require dissipative divertors to handle the high particle and heat loads leaving the core plasma (100–400 MW/m2 in ITER). A radiative divertor is proposed as a possible scenario, utilizing a hydrogen target gas to disperse the plasma momentum and trace impurity radiation to dissipate the plasma heat flux. Introducing an impurity into the target hydrogen gas enhances the radiative power loss but may lead to a significant impurity backflow to the main plasma. Thus, impurity flow control represents a crucial design concern. Such impurity flows are studied experimentally in this thesis. The PISCES-A linear plasma device (n ≤ 3 × 1019 m−3, kTe ≤ 20 eV) has been used to simulate a gas target divertor. To study the transport of impurities, a trace amount of impurity gas (i.e., neon and argon) is puffed near the target plate along with the hydrogen gas. Varying the hydrogen gas puffing rate permits us to study the effects of various background plasma conditions on the transport of impurities. A 1-1/2-D fluid code has been developed to solve the continuity and momentum equations for a neutral and singly ionized impurity in a hydrogen background plasma. The results indicate an axial reduction in the impurity concentration upstream from the impurity puffing source. Impurity entrainment is more effective for higher hydrogen target pressures (and for higher hydrogen plasma densities). However, if there is a reversal of the background plasma flow, impurity particles can propagate past the plasma flow reversal point and are then no longer entrained.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    11
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []