Assessment of plasma power deposition on the ITER ICRH antennas

Ion cyclotron resonance heating (ICRH) is one of the three additional heating schemes to be deployed on ITER. Its two antenna arrays, installed on the outboard midplane, will deliver 20 MW of RF power in the 40–55 MHz frequency range. The plasma-facing component of the antenna assembly is the Farada...

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Main Authors: M. Brank, R.A. Pitts, G. Simič, P. Lamalle, M. Kocan, F. Köchl, Y. Gribov, V. Polli, L. Kos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:Nuclear Materials and Energy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352179121000971
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spelling doaj-e811a16d4a5943238cdb244ac045e9ae2021-06-03T04:57:15ZengElsevierNuclear Materials and Energy2352-17912021-06-0127101021Assessment of plasma power deposition on the ITER ICRH antennasM. Brank0R.A. Pitts1G. Simič2P. Lamalle3M. Kocan4F. Köchl5Y. Gribov6V. Polli7L. Kos8Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Aškerčeva 6, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia; Corresponding author.ITER Organisation, Route de Vinon-sur-Verdon – CS 90 046-13067, St. Paul Lez Durance, FranceFaculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Aškerčeva 6, 1000 Ljubljana, SloveniaITER Organisation, Route de Vinon-sur-Verdon – CS 90 046-13067, St. Paul Lez Durance, FranceITER Organisation, Route de Vinon-sur-Verdon – CS 90 046-13067, St. Paul Lez Durance, FranceCCFE, Culham Science Centre, Abingdon OX14 3DB, United KingdomITER Organisation, Route de Vinon-sur-Verdon – CS 90 046-13067, St. Paul Lez Durance, FranceITER Organisation, Route de Vinon-sur-Verdon – CS 90 046-13067, St. Paul Lez Durance, FranceFaculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Aškerčeva 6, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia; Corresponding author.Ion cyclotron resonance heating (ICRH) is one of the three additional heating schemes to be deployed on ITER. Its two antenna arrays, installed on the outboard midplane, will deliver 20 MW of RF power in the 40–55 MHz frequency range. The plasma-facing component of the antenna assembly is the Faraday screen, comprising beryllium (Be) tile armoured, actively cooled bars located only ~1 cm radially behind the innermost point of the shaped Be first wall panels (FWPs). As such they are in close proximity to the scrape-off layer (SOL) plasma and it is important to assess the maximum heat loads that the screen bars may experience during high power ITER operation. This paper provides a detailed assessment of these loads using the new 3D field line tracing and power deposition framework SMITER (Kos et al., 2019). The focus is on the H-mode, burning plasma scenario, taking into account both plasma heat loading (including average loading due to mitigated Type I ELMs) and the loads due to photonic impact (assessed with the optical ray-tracing package Raysect (Meakins and Carr, 2017)) from power radiated in the core obtained from integrated JINTRAC simulations. Calculations are also performed to assess the minimum allowed antenna to magnetic separatrix distances, for cases in which closer approach may be required to improve RF coupling.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352179121000971ITERICRH antennaPlasma heat loadsPhotonic heat loadsPlasma-facing components
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Brank
R.A. Pitts
G. Simič
P. Lamalle
M. Kocan
F. Köchl
Y. Gribov
V. Polli
L. Kos
spellingShingle M. Brank
R.A. Pitts
G. Simič
P. Lamalle
M. Kocan
F. Köchl
Y. Gribov
V. Polli
L. Kos
Assessment of plasma power deposition on the ITER ICRH antennas
Nuclear Materials and Energy
ITER
ICRH antenna
Plasma heat loads
Photonic heat loads
Plasma-facing components
author_facet M. Brank
R.A. Pitts
G. Simič
P. Lamalle
M. Kocan
F. Köchl
Y. Gribov
V. Polli
L. Kos
author_sort M. Brank
title Assessment of plasma power deposition on the ITER ICRH antennas
title_short Assessment of plasma power deposition on the ITER ICRH antennas
title_full Assessment of plasma power deposition on the ITER ICRH antennas
title_fullStr Assessment of plasma power deposition on the ITER ICRH antennas
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of plasma power deposition on the ITER ICRH antennas
title_sort assessment of plasma power deposition on the iter icrh antennas
publisher Elsevier
series Nuclear Materials and Energy
issn 2352-1791
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Ion cyclotron resonance heating (ICRH) is one of the three additional heating schemes to be deployed on ITER. Its two antenna arrays, installed on the outboard midplane, will deliver 20 MW of RF power in the 40–55 MHz frequency range. The plasma-facing component of the antenna assembly is the Faraday screen, comprising beryllium (Be) tile armoured, actively cooled bars located only ~1 cm radially behind the innermost point of the shaped Be first wall panels (FWPs). As such they are in close proximity to the scrape-off layer (SOL) plasma and it is important to assess the maximum heat loads that the screen bars may experience during high power ITER operation. This paper provides a detailed assessment of these loads using the new 3D field line tracing and power deposition framework SMITER (Kos et al., 2019). The focus is on the H-mode, burning plasma scenario, taking into account both plasma heat loading (including average loading due to mitigated Type I ELMs) and the loads due to photonic impact (assessed with the optical ray-tracing package Raysect (Meakins and Carr, 2017)) from power radiated in the core obtained from integrated JINTRAC simulations. Calculations are also performed to assess the minimum allowed antenna to magnetic separatrix distances, for cases in which closer approach may be required to improve RF coupling.
topic ITER
ICRH antenna
Plasma heat loads
Photonic heat loads
Plasma-facing components
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352179121000971
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