2005 47th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 24–28, 2005;
Denver, Colorado
Session FI1: The Road to Burning Plasmas
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
Adam's Mark Hotel
Room: Plaza Ballroom ABC
Chair: Stephen Wolfe, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.DPP.FI1.3
Abstract: FI1.00003 : Operation of Alcator C-Mod with high-Z plasma facing components and implications
10:30 AM–11:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Bruce Lipschultz
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology Plasma Science and Fusion Center)
High-Z Plasma Facing Components (PFCs) are likely necessary for a
tokamak
reactor due to their low tritium (T) retention, capability to
handle high
heat fluxes with low erosion, and robustness to nuclear damage and
activation. ITER is considering using all high-Z PFCs to reduce
the T
retention projected from current carbon PFC experiments. Recent
C-Mod
experiments, utilizing molybdenum PFCs, provide unique experience
regarding
the effect of high-Z PFCs on: 1) plasma performance; 2) necessity
of a low-Z
wall-coating (boronization); {\&} 3) hydrogenic retention. After
boron was
removed from vessel {\&} molybdenum PFC surfaces RF-heated
H-modes were
readily achieved although the resultant enhancement in energy
confinement
was small (H89 $\sim $ 1). Particle confinement was `good,'
causing core Mo
radiation to rapidly rise after the H-mode transition, cooling
the plasma,
reducing confinement and/or causing a back H/L transition. Ohmic
H-modes had
better confinement (H89 $\sim $ 1.5). Post-boronization the
situation was
changed; Mo sources and core levels were reduced $\sim $ x10 with
H89
reaching 2. Under these conditions a world-record volume-average
plasma
pressure of 1.8 atmospheres at 5.4 T was achieved at the ITER $\beta
_{N}$. The positive effects of boronization are found to last a
limited
time, correlated with the input energy. Intra- and inter-shot
boronization
techniques were developed with the latter being the most
successful. Wall
fuel retention was significant (up to 50{\%} of D$_{2}$ pulsed
in) both for
boronized and un-boronized PFCs. Scaling fuel retention to an
ITER-size
device gives of order 50g/pulse. Planned, localized disruptions were
developed to thermally desorb the retained H/D from PFC surfaces.
This
initial comparison indicates that high-Z operation, without
boronization,
carries some risk for poor confinement performance and implies that
boronization (or other low-Z wall coating), not presently planned
for ITER,
might be required for high-Z PFCs. With or without boronization,
the H/D
retention could be large; but disruptive techniques to remove the
D/T show
promise.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.DPP.FI1.3