Bulletin of the American Physical Society
60th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 63, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 5–9, 2018; Portland, Oregon
Session GO5: SPARC, C-Mod, and High Field Tokamaks
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Tuesday, November 6, 2018
OCC
Room: B113-114
Chair: Carlos Paz-Soldan, General Atomics
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DPP.GO5.15
Abstract: GO5.00015 : Multi-Machine, Multi-Constraint Validation of TGLF on Alcator C-Mod and ASDEX Upgrade*
12:18 PM–12:30 PM
Presenter:
Alexander J Creely
(Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT)
Authors:
Alexander J Creely
(Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT)
Garrard D Conway
(Max Planck Inst)
Simon J Freethy
(Max Planck Inst, Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT)
Tobias Goerler
(Max Planck Inst)
Nathan T Howard
(Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT)
Pablo Rodriguez Fernandez
(Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT)
Anne Elisabeth White
(Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT)
the ASDEX Upgrade Team
(Max Planck Inst)
The turbulent transport code TGLF [Staebler PoP 2016] is validated on 11 plasma discharges on Alcator C-Mod and ASDEX Upgrade. Traditional transport validation studies focus on a single plasma discharge, due to the computational resources required. Increasingly accurate reduced models such as TGLF and optimization frameworks such as VITALS [Rodriguez-Fernandez FST 2018], however, enable another approach to validation. This study employs heat fluxes, electron temperature fluctuations from CECE [Creely RSI 2018], and perturbative diffusivity [Creely NF 2016] to validate TGLF on 11 discharges on two machines. This study is motivated by recent results suggesting that multi-scale gyrokinetics is required to accurately model some plasmas, while ion-scale models are sufficient for others [Howard PoP 2016, Creely NF Sub.]. To that end, TGLF is validated in both ion- and multi-scale configurations. Multi-scale simulations agree with experiment in all cases. The ratio of the high-k to low-k peak linear growth rates correlates with the importance of multi-scale effects.
*This work is supported by the US DOE under grants DE-SC0006419 and DE-FC02-99ER54512 and by the US DOD under the NDSEG Fellowship. This work has been carried out within the EUROfusion Consortium under grant No 633053.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DPP.GO5.15
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