Bulletin of the American Physical Society
63rd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 66, Number 13
Monday–Friday, November 8–12, 2021; Pittsburgh, PA
Session TO08: MFE: Disruptions and Runaway Electrons
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, November 11, 2021
Room: Rooms 317-318
Chair: Carl Sovinec, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Abstract: TO08.00004 : Progress in Tokamak Disruption Simulation (TDS) SciDAC Project*
10:06 AM–10:18 AM
Presenter:
Xianzhu Tang
(Los Alamos Natl Lab)
Author:
Xianzhu Tang
(Los Alamos Natl Lab)
Collaboration:
TDS SciDAC Team
the physics basis for effective disruption mitigation. It has focused on the distinct physics of
thermal (TQ) and current quench (CQ), and the integration of different physics
components for whole device modeling. Here we highlight several recent
progresses. The first is the kinetic physics underlying TQ
when large-scale MHD modes open up nested flux surfaces, and how the
magnetic connection length correlates with the time scale for core
temperature collapse, which can explain the vast range of
TQ time observed in experiments. The
second is the atomic processes underlying high-Z impurity purge by
hydrogen injection during CQ, which is
essential for a number of recent proposals for ITER runaway
mitigation. Here the roles of runaways in collisional ionization and
excitation, and the charge exchange between
different species, are explored with collisional-radiation
modeling. The third is integrated modeling of CQ, which involves the initial Ohmic-to-runaway
current conversion and latter process of either runaway termination or
runaway-to-Ohmic current back-conversion. The final thrust is the
computational effort within TDS that explores a range of advanced
numerical and computational methods for integrated
disruption simulation.
*Work supported by OFES and OASCR under TDS SciDAC and fusion basetheory program.
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