Title of article
Disruption mitigation with high-pressure noble gas injection
Author/Authors
Whyte، نويسنده , , D.G. and Jernigan، نويسنده , , T.C. and Humphreys، نويسنده , , D.A. and Hyatt، نويسنده , , A.W. and Lasnier، نويسنده , , C.J. and Parks، نويسنده , , P.B. and Evans، نويسنده , , T.E. and Taylor، نويسنده , , P.L. and Kellman، نويسنده , , A.G. and Gray، نويسنده , , D.S. and Hollmann، نويسنده , , E.M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
8
From page
1239
To page
1246
Abstract
High-pressure gas jets of neon and argon are used to mitigate the three principal damaging effects of tokamak disruptions: thermal loading of the divertor surfaces, vessel stress from poloidal halo currents and the buildup and loss of relativistic electrons to the wall. The gas jet penetrates as a neutral species through to the central plasma at its sonic velocity. The injected gas atoms increase up to 500 times the total electron inventory in the plasma volume, resulting in a relatively benign radiative dissipation of >95% of the plasma stored energy. The rapid cooling and the slow movement of the plasma to the wall reduce poloidal halo currents during the current decay. The thermally collapsed plasma is very cold (∼1–2 eV) and the impurity charge distribution can include >50% fraction neutral species. If a sufficient quantity of gas is injected, the neutrals inhibit runaway electrons. A physical model of radiative cooling is developed and validated against DIII-D experiments. The model shows that gas jet mitigation, including runaway suppression, extrapolates favorably to burning plasmas where disruption damage will be more severe. Initial results of real-time disruption detection triggering gas jet injection for mitigation are shown.
Keywords
Plasma-facing components , Halo currents , Burning plasmas , Runaway electrons , Disruption
Journal title
Journal of Nuclear Materials
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Nuclear Materials
Record number
1357499
Link To Document