ARIES-AT Physics Overview presented by S.C. Jardin with input from C. Kessel, T. K. Mau, R. Miller, and the ARIES team US/Japan Workshop on Fusion Power.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Glenn Bateman Lehigh University Physics Department
Advertisements

Physics Basis of FIRE Next Step Burning Plasma Experiment Charles Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory U.S.-Japan Workshop on Fusion Power Plant.
ARIES-Advanced Tokamak Power Plant Study Physics Analysis and Issues Charles Kessel, for the ARIES Physics Team Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory U.S.-Japan.
Stability, Transport, and Conrol for the discussion Y. Miura IEA/LT Workshop (W59) combined with DOE/JAERI Technical Planning of Tokamak Experiments (FP1-2)
Who will save the tokamak – Harry Potter, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Shaquille O’Neal or Donald Trump? J. P. Freidberg, F. Mangiarotti, J. Minervini MIT Plasma.
1 6/13/2015 ARIES PULSAR STARLITE Overview of ARIES Physics Studies ARIES-I, ARIES-II/IV, ARIES-III [D- 3 He], Pulsar, ARIES-RS, ARIES-ST, ARIES-AT presented.
1 Heating and Current Drive Studies In the ARIES Program T.K. Mau University of California, San Diego Peer Review of the ARIES Program August 17, 2000.
Progress in Configuration Development for Compact Stellarator Reactors Long-Poe Ku Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Aries Project Meeting, June 16-17,
Physics Analysis for Equilibrium, Stability, and Divertors ARIES Power Plant Studies Charles Kessel, PPPL DOE Peer Review, UCSD August 17, 2000.
2010 US-Japan Workshop on Fusion Power Plants and Related Advanced Technologies at UCSD CA, US, Feb.23-24, Commissioning scenario including divertor.
Contributions of Burning Plasma Physics Experiment to Fusion Energy Goals Farrokh Najmabadi Dept. of Electrical & Computer Eng. And Center for Energy Research.
Assessment of Quasi-Helically Symmetric Configurations as Candidate for Compact Stellarator Reactors Long-Poe Ku Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Aries.
Proposals for Next Year’s MFE Activities C. Kessel, PPPL ARIES Project Meeting, Sept. 24, 2000.
Development of the New ARIES Tokamak Systems Code Zoran Dragojlovic, Rene Raffray, Farrokh Najmabadi, Charles Kessel, Lester Waganer US-Japan Workshop.
Status of Advanced Design Studies and Overview of ARIES-AT Study Farrokh Najmabadi US/Japan Workshop on Fusion Power Plant Studies & Advanced Technologies.
Characteristics of Commercial Fusion Power Plants Results from ARIES-AT Study Farrokh Najmabadi Fusion Power Associates Annual Meeting & Symposium July.
Optimization of a Steady-State Tokamak-Based Power Plant Farrokh Najmabadi University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA IEA Workshop 59 “Shape and.
ARIES-ACT1 preliminary plasma description C. Kessel, PPPL ARIES Project Meeting, October 13, 2011.
US-Japan Workshop on Fusion Power Plants and Related Advanced Technologies High Temperature Plasma Center, the University of Tokyo Yuichi OGAWA, Takuya.
Physics Issues and Trade-offs in Magnetic Fusion Power Plants Farrokh Najmabadi University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA APS April 2002 Meeting.
Recent Results of Configuration Studies L. P. Ku Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory ARIES-CS Project Meeting, November 17, 2005 UCSD, San Diego, CA.
Highlights of ARIES-AT Study Farrokh Najmabadi For the ARIES Team VLT Conference call July 12, 2000 ARIES Web Site:
ARIES Systems Studies: ARIES-I and ARIES-AT type operating points C. Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory ARIES Project Meeting, San Diego, December.
1 MHD for Fusion Where to Next? Jeff Freidberg MIT.
1 ST workshop 2008 Conception of LHCD Experiments on the Spherical Tokamak Globus-M O.N. Shcherbinin, V.V. Dyachenko, M.A. Irzak, S.A. Khitrov A.F.Ioffe.
C. Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory For the NSTX National Team DOE Review of NSTX Five-Year Research Program Proposal June 30 – July 2, 2003.
Y. Sakamoto JAEA Japan-US Workshop on Fusion Power Plants and Related Technologies with participations from China and Korea February 26-28, 2013 at Kyoto.
Advanced Tokamak Plasmas and the Fusion Ignition Research Experiment Charles Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Spring APS, Philadelphia, 4/5/2003.
TOTAL Simulation of ITER Plasmas Kozo YAMAZAKI Nagoya Univ., Chikusa-ku, Nagoya , Japan 1.
Progress in ARIES-ACT Study Farrokh Najmabadi UC San Diego Japan/US Workshop on Power Plant Studies and Related Advanced Technologies 8-9 March 2012 US.
1 Modeling of EAST Divertor S. Zhu Institute of Plasma Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Advanced Tokamak Regimes in the Fusion Ignition Research Experiment (FIRE) 30th Conference on Controlled Fusion and Plasma Physics St. Petersburg, Russia.
Integrated Modeling and Simulations of ITER Burning Plasma Scenarios C. E. Kessel, R. V. Budny, K. Indireshkumar, D. Meade Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.
Advanced Tokamak Plasmas and Their Control C. Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Columbia University, 4/4/03.
NSTX-U NSTX-U PAC-31 Response to Questions – Day 1 Summary of Answers Q: Maximum pulse length at 1MA, 0.75T, 1 st year parameters? –A1: Full 5 seconds.
ITER Standard H-mode, Hybrid and Steady State WDB Submissions R. Budny, C. Kessel PPPL ITPA Modeling Topical Working Group Session on ITER Simulations.
Heating and Current Drive Systems for ARIES-AT T.K. Mau University of California, San Diego ARIES Project Meeting September 18-20, 2000 Princeton Plasma.
Current Drive for FIRE AT-Mode T.K. Mau University of California, San Diego Workshop on Physics Issues for FIRE May 1-3, 2000 Princeton Plasma Physics.
Global Stability Issues for a Next Step Burning Plasma Experiment UFA Burning Plasma Workshop Austin, Texas December 11, 2000 S. C. Jardin with input from.
Physics of fusion power Lecture 9 : The tokamak continued.
1 Instabilities in the Long Pulse Discharges on the HT-7 X.Gao and HT-7 Team Institute of Plasma Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, P.O.Box 1126, Hefei,
Simulation and Analysis of the Hybrid Operating Mode in ITER C. Kessel, R. Budny, and K. Indireshkumar Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Symposium On.
Stabilizing Shells in ARIES C. E. Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory ARIES Project Meeting, 5/28-29/2008.
ASIPP HT-7 The effect of alleviating the heat load of the first wall by impurity injection The effect of alleviating the heat load of the first wall by.
Compact Stellarator Approach to DEMO J.F. Lyon for the US stellarator community FESAC Subcommittee Aug. 7, 2007.
ITER STEADY-STATE OPERATIONAL SCENARIOS A.R. Polevoi for ITER IT and HT contributors ITER-SS 1.
MCZ Active MHD Control Needs in Helical Configurations M.C. Zarnstorff 1 Presented by E. Fredrickson 1 With thanks to A. Weller 2, J. Geiger 2,
Steady State Discharge Modeling for KSTAR C. Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory US-Korea Workshop - KSTAR Collaborations, 5/19-20/2004.
Physics Analysis and Flexibility Issues for FIRE NSO PAC-2 Meeting January 17-18, 2001 S. C. Jardin with input from C.Kessel, J.Mandrekas, D.Meade, and.
Approach for a High Performance Fusion Power Source Pathway Dale Meade Fusion Innovation Research and Energy ARIES Team Meeting March 3-4, 2008 UCSD, San.
Optimization of a High-  Steady-State Tokamak Burning Plasma Experiment Based on a High-  Steady-State Tokamak Power Plant D. M. Meade, C. Kessel, S.
MHD Issues and Control in FIRE C. Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Workshop on Active Control of MHD Stability Austin, TX 11/3-5/2003.
20th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference, 2004 Naka Fusion Research Establishment, Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute Stationary high confinement plasmas.
Numerical Study on Ideal MHD Stability and RWM in Tokamaks Speaker: Yue Liu Dalian University of Technology, China Co-Authors: Li Li, Xinyang Xu, Chao.
FIRE Advanced Tokamak Progress C. Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory NSO PAC 2/27-28/2003, General Atomics 1.0D Operating Space 2.PF Coils 3.Equilibrium/Stability.
Advanced Tokamak Modeling for FIRE C. Kessel, PPPL NSO/PAC Meeting, University of Wisconsin, July 10-11, 2001.
ZHENG Guo-yao, FENG Kai-ming, SHENG Guang-zhao 1) Southwestern Institute of Physics, Chengdu Simulation of plasma parameters for HCSB-DEMO by 1.5D plasma.
Development of A New Class of QA Stellarator Reactor Configurations Long-Poe Ku PPPL Aries Project Meeting, March 8-9, 2004 University of California, San.
NSTX Meeting name – abbreviated presentation title, abbreviated author name (??/??/20??) Goals of NSTX Advanced Scenario and Control TSG Study, implement,
Integrated Plasma Simulations C. E. Kessel Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Workshop Toward an Integrated Plasma Simulation Oak Ridge, TN November 7-9,
Pedestal Characterization and Stability of Small-ELM Regimes in NSTX* A. Sontag 1, J. Canik 1, R. Maingi 1, J. Manickam 2, P. Snyder 3, R. Bell 2, S. Gerhardt.
AES, ANL, Boeing, Columbia U., CTD, GA, GIT, LLNL, INEEL, MIT, ORNL, PPPL, SNL, SRS, UCLA, UCSD, UIIC, UWisc FIRE Collaboration FIRE.
Long Pulse High Performance Plasma Scenario Development for NSTX C. Kessel and S. Kaye - providing TRANSP runs of specific discharges S.
Compact Stellarators as Reactors J. F. Lyon, ORNL NCSX PAC meeting June 4, 1999.
U NIVERSITY OF S CIENCE AND T ECHNOLOGY OF C HINA Influence of ion orbit width on threshold of neoclassical tearing modes Huishan Cai 1, Ding Li 2, Jintao.
A.D. Turnbull, R. Buttery, M. Choi, L.L Lao, S. Smith, H. St John
Influence of energetic ions on neoclassical tearing modes
Current Drive and Plasma Rotation Considerations for ARIES-AT
New Results for Plasma and Coil Configuration Studies
New Development in Plasma and Coil Configurations
Presentation transcript:

ARIES-AT Physics Overview presented by S.C. Jardin with input from C. Kessel, T. K. Mau, R. Miller, and the ARIES team US/Japan Workshop on Fusion Power Plant Studies and Advanced Technologies with participation of EU March 16-17, 2000 Copley International Conference Center, UCSD

Physics Goals for ARIES-AT ARIES-RS (1996) has received a lot of attention –provides the U.S. vision of a tokamak power plant –being compared against ARIES-ST, Stellarators, fission, etc –stimulated the tokamak community to explore reversed shear –motivated new prototype experiments ( TPX, KSTAR) It was felt that the ARIES-RS physics analysis lacked the depth it should have received for such an important study –~ 1 year design during time of program change We were asked to revisit ARIES-RS to perform a more aggressive and more complete design – ARIES-AT –More aggressive: use experience gained in ARIES-ST to optimize further –More complete: bring in transport analysis, better edge analysis

ARIES-AT has been optimized to a higher degree than previous studies Uses 99% flux surface rather than 95% –Higher  values are stable More flexible pressure profile –Better bootstrap alignment and higher  –Allows elimination of HHFW, and use only LHCD for off-axis CD Higher triangularity –Allowed by elimination of inboard slot divertor –Higher  N and higher I P to give higher  Higher elongation –Allowed by moving stabilizing shell closer to plasma –Higher  N and higher I P to give higher 

Higher elongation allows higher  Made possible by a closer vertical stabilizer shell b/a =0.5 -> 0.2 Increased elongation has weak impact on  N, but strong impact on      P  a       q    Ballooning stable  and  N  = 0.7 q edge = 3.5 A = 4

Kink Stability requires analysis up to n > 6 NOTE: critical wall location moves in for  > 2.2

Vertical Stability Analysis indicates which plasma elongations are viable based on allowable distance between plasma and shell Feedback control calculations still need to be done to set power requirements.

Including a non-zero edge density allows increased edge radiation ARIES-RS had n(a) = 0.4 n(0) Strong bootstrap reduction Increased CD requirement excessive Z EFF in core we use n(a) = 0.2 n(0) with 0.8% neon, making Z EFF = 2 we have examined  N =5.6,6.0,6.5 cases with n(a)/n(0) = 0.2 to find stable equilibrium and CD requirements off-axis CD is about 1.2 MA

These studies use a accurate formula for the bootstrap current taking into account all collisionality regimes Can lead to significant differences in the optimization

Seed Current Drive on ARIES-AT Current drive is required in two regions: - On-axis: provides bootstrap seed and controls q(0) - Off-axis: controls q min location and enhances  limit. Radio frequency systems are used for integrability to fusion power core. RF power launch location spectra are selected for maximum CD efficiency and profile alignment. For a 1-GW ARIES-AT, CD requirements are: - On-axis: 68 MHz 4 MW - Off-axis: 3.6 GHz 22 MW ARIES-AT:  N = 6.0, I BS /I = 0.94 = 16 keV, Z eff = 1.8  B = 6.3 On-axis CD: ICRF/FW Off-axis CD: LHW

Current and Rotation Drive on ARIES-AT When rotation generation for kink stabilization is considered, we propose using tangential NBI that also drives off-axis current. For efficient rotation drive, we use moderate energy beams based on positive-ion sources. The beam orientation is also set to maximize CD efficiency and profile alignment. A 1-GW ARIES-AT reactor with  N = 6.0, =16 keV will require: - On-axis: 68 MHz & 4 MW - Off-axis: 120 keV & 34 MW - Generated rigid-body rotation speed is 264 km/s ~ 0.05 V ao ARIES-AT:  N = 6.0, I bs /I = 0.94 = 16 keV, Z eff = 1.8  B = 4.0 ICRF/FW NBI

Physics Comparison between ARIES-RS and ARIES-AT RSAT Plasma current, I P (MA) Plasma Shape,  1.9,.762.2,.86 ,  N (%) 5.0, , 5.4 Bootstrap Fraction B T at coil, plasma (T)15.8, ,5.9 ITER 89P H factor CD power8025 Major Radius R (m) COE7653 Both have: A=4 1GW net electric

Plasma Transport Constraints In ARIES-RS the only constraint imposed on kinetic profiles (n,T) was that the dominant gradient lie inside or around the q min location In ARIES-AT, we are attempting to find density and temperature profiles that: provide good bootstrap alignment ideal MHD stability non inconsistent with experimental observations predicted by a transport model (if possible) for some rotation profile to be determined (GLF23) connection to the divertor solution neoclassical tearing mode stable

Summary optimization studies show that  can be increased significantly over ARIES-RS likely configuration has  =2.2,  > 9% finite edge densities allow reasonable divertor solutions, but affect bootstraps current and CD likely configuration has n(a) / n(0) = Current drive systems probably sufficient CD power ~ 25 – 35 MW density and temperature profiles only approximately constrained so far future work by GA will attempt to apply GLF23 transport model