Mitigation of plasma-wall interactions with low-Z powders in DIII-D high confinement plasmas
Abstract
Experiments with low-Z powder injection in DIII-D high confinement discharges demonstrated increased divertor dissipation and detachment while maintaining good core energy confinement. Lithium (Li), boron (B), and boron nitride (BN) powders were injected in H-mode plasmas (I p = 1 MA, B t = 2 T, P NB = 6 MW, ⟨n e⟩ = 3.6-5.0 ṡ 1019 m-3) into the upper small-angle slot divertor for 2 s intervals at constant rates of 3-204 mg s-1. The multi-species BN powders at a rate of 54 mg s-1 showed the most substantial increase in divertor neutral compression by more than an order of magnitude and lasting detachment with minor degradation of the stored magnetic energy W mhd by 5%. Rates of 204 mg s-1 of boron nitride powder further reduce edge localized mode-fluxes on the divertor but also cause a drop in confinement performance by 24% due to the onset of an n = 2 tearing mode. The application of powders also showed a substantial improvement of wall conditions manifesting in reduced wall fueling source and intrinsic carbon and oxygen content in response to the cumulative injection of non-recycling materials. The results suggest that low-Z powder injection, including mixed element compounds, is a promising new core-edge compatible technique that simultaneously enables divertor detachment and improves wall conditions during high confinement operation.
- Publication:
-
Nuclear Fusion
- Pub Date:
- October 2022
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2203.15204
- Bibcode:
- 2022NucFu..62j6015E
- Keywords:
-
- divertor power exhaust;
- wall conditioning;
- detachment;
- impurity seeding;
- low recycling;
- lithium;
- boron;
- Physics - Plasma Physics;
- Physics - Applied Physics
- E-Print:
- F. Effenberg et al 2022 Nucl. Fusion in press https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-4326/ac899d