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 UP11: Poster Session VIII:
HED:High Energy Density Plasma Science
MFE: Superconducting Tokamaks; Self-organized configurations II: FRC, RFP, Spheromak; Machine learning techniques in MFE
ICF: Machine learning techniques in ICF
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Thursday, November 2, 2023
Room: Plaza ABC
Abstract: UP11.00086 : Modeling Plasma-Material Interactions for a Sheared-Flow-Stabilized Z Pinch
Presenter:
Jonny Dadras
(Zap Energy Inc)
Authors:
Jonny Dadras
(Zap Energy Inc)
Peter H Stoltz
(Zap Energy Inc)
Colin S Adams
(Zap Energy Inc)
Eric T Meier
(Zap Energy Inc)
Collaboration:
Zap Energy Inc
impact of the edge plasma on the plasma-facing components (PFCs). For Zap’s FuZE and FuZE-Q
devices, the cathode and anode are exposed to plasma for tens of microseconds, leading to
heat and particle fluxes that can result in melting of metallic components and the sublimation of
graphitic materials.
In this work, the heat and particle fluxes to PFCs are derived from 2D MHD whole-device
modeling (WDM). Because the magnetic field is tangential to the surface in these models, only a
small fraction of the Bohm flux is expected to reach the surface. Importantly, it is assumed that
any applied voltage drops across the cathode sheath width. A Green’s function solution to the
semi-infinite 1D heat equation is used to predict the time-dependent surface temperature and
resulting thermal erosion. The model incorporates the effects of prompt redeposition of
sputtered and evaporated particles. Estimates of heat loads, thermal and sputtering erosion are
presented for different plasma-facing components. Also shown are electron emittance models
based on thermionic/Schottky emission, ionization of eroded material, and ion-induced
secondary electron generation.
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