Bulletin of the American Physical Society
65th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2023; Denver, Colorado
Session GO09: MFE: Detachment, Power Handling, and Divertor Physics
9:30 AM–12:18 PM,
Tuesday, October 31, 2023
Room: Governor's Square 16
Chair: Tess Bernard, General Atomics - San Diego
Abstract: GO09.00003 : Results From The TCV Plasma EXhaust (PEX) Upgrade
9:54 AM–10:06 AM
Presenter:
Olivier Fevrier
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Authors:
Olivier Fevrier
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Holger Reimerdes
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Christian Theiler
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Claudia Colandrea
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Basil P Duval
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Ambrogio Fasoli
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Sophie Gorno
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Benoit Labit
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Lorenzo Martinelli
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Artur Perek
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Harshita Raj
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Guangyu Sun
(EPFL, SPC, Switzerland)
Cedric K Tsui
(Center for Energy Research (CER), University of California-San Diego (UCSD))
Collaborations:
TCV, EUROfusion MST1
In line with simulation expectations, stronger divertor closure correlated with increased divertor neutral pressure, to date up to a factor of 5, although a quantitative mismatch remains between experiments and simulations, indicating more complexity. Increased plasma exhaust mitigation is also found. Electron temperature and density measurements in the divertor volume show a cooler and denser plasma with baffles. Target particle flux measurements further show that higher divertor closure facilitates detachment, with a typical reduction of ~30% in the core density required to obtain particle flux roll-over in baffled L-modes. Improved exhaust performance with baffling is also observed in H-mode, with a reduction in inter-ELM peak parallel heat flux for standard and alternative divertor configurations of up to ~40%.
Building on the performance of divertor gas baffles, a planned upgrade to the Swiss Plasma Center's installations will equip TCV with a tightly baffled, long-legged divertor. This will experimentally assess the concept, and further challenge available divertor models, improving our confidence in their predictions for future devices.
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