Bulletin of the American Physical Society
66th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 7–11, 2024; Atlanta, Georgia
Session PO05: MFE:Technology
2:00 PM–4:48 PM,
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
Hyatt Regency
Room: Hanover AB
Chair: Shawn Tang, General Atomics
Abstract: PO05.00009 : Demonstration of low recycling and NBI fueling with liquid lithium walls in the Lithium Tokamak Experiment-β (LTX-β)*
3:36 PM–3:48 PM
Presenter:
Dennis P Boyle
(PPPL)
Authors:
Dennis P Boyle
(PPPL)
Anurag Maan
(PPPL)
Richard Majeski
(PPPL)
Shota Abe
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Santanu Banerjee
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
William J Capecchi
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Drew B Elliott
(Oak Ridge National Lab)
Manaure Francisquez
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Christopher J Hansen
(Columbia University)
Euichan Jung
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Shigeyuki Kubota
(University of California, Los Angeles)
Rajesh Maingi
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Adam G McLean
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Evan T Ostrowski
(Princeton University)
Vlad A Soukhanovskii
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
George J Wilkie
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
Leonid Zakharov
(LiWFusion)
Low-recycling liquid lithium surfaces are a potential solution to the two main obstacles for fusion - confinement and power handling. Several critical prerequisites for the low-recycling, liquid Li approach have been recently achieved in the Lithium Tokamak Experiment-β. Improved conditioning techniques in LTX-β created clean, mirror-like liquid Li surfaces that fully surround the plasma, without significant operational problems. Experiments with liquid Li walls have reproduced key results previously demonstrated with solid Li, including a hot, low-recycling edge (R~0.6) with a unique, low-collisionality scrape-off layer. A hot edge is predicted to greatly improve confinement by suppressing temperature gradients that drive turbulent losses. As gas puffing cools the edge, core fueling is essential in the low-recycling regime. LTX-β has recently achieved neutral beam fueling and heating with a ~20% increase in plasma density and high normalized confinement not seen to degrade with PNBI. Recent improvements to the neutral beam, liquid Li techniques, plasma operational systems, and diagnostics will extend the initial proof-of-principle results to higher levels of performance and steadier-state, as well as investigate new, unique aspects of the low-recycling liquid Li regime.
*Supported by US DOE contracts DE-AC02-09CH11466, DE-SC0019006, DE-AC05-00OR22725, DE-SC0024898, DE-SC0019308, DE-SC0023481, and DE-AC52-07NA27344.
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