Title :
Extreme Conditions for Plasma-Facing Components in Tokamak Fusion Devices
Author :
Hassanein, A. ; Sizyuk, V. ; Sizyuk, T.
Author_Institution :
Center for Mater. Under Extreme Environ., Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN, USA
Abstract :
Safe and reliable operation is still one of the major challenges in the development of fusion energy. In magnetic fusion devices, perfect plasma confinement is difficult to achieve. During transient loss of plasma confinement, high plasma power and particle beams (power densities up to hundreds of gigawatts per square meter in time duration on the order of milliseconds) strike the reactor walls, particularly the divertor plate, and can significantly damage the exposed surfaces and also indirectly damage nearby components. To predict the resulting damage of the direct plasma impact on the divertor plate, comprehensive multiphysics multiphase models are developed, integrated, and implemented in the High Energy Interaction with General Heterogeneous Target Systems computer simulation package. The evolution of the divertor material, resulting vaporization, heating and ionization of vapor plasma to higher temperatures, and, consequently, the resulting photon radiation, transport, and deposition around the divertor area are calculated for typical instability parameters of the edge-localized modes and disruption for an ITER-like geometry.
Keywords :
Tokamak devices; fusion reactor divertors; fusion reactor targets; plasma boundary layers; plasma instability; plasma simulation; plasma temperature; plasma toroidal confinement; plasma transport processes; plasma-wall interactions; ITER-like geometry; computer simulation package; divertor material evolution; divertor plate; edge-localized mode; exposed surface damage analysis; fusion energy; heterogeneous target system; high plasma power; instability parameter; magnetic fusion device; multiphysics multiphase model; photon radiation analysis; plasma temperature; plasma-facing component; tokamak fusion device; transient plasma confinement loss; transport process; vapor plasma heating; vapor plasma ionization; vaporization process; Clouds; Computational modeling; Heating; Magnetohydrodynamics; Monte Carlo methods; Plasma temperature; Computer simulation; Tokamak devices; plasma density; plasma temperature; radiation effects; reactor design;
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPS.2011.2159245