Effect of two-stage shattered pellet injection on tokamak disruptions
Journal article, 2022

An effective disruption mitigation system in a tokamak reactor should limit the exposure of the wall to localized heat losses and to the impact of high current runaway electron beams, and avoid excessive forces on the structure. We evaluate with respect to these aspects a two-stage deuterium-neon shattered pellet injection in an ITER-like plasma, using simulations with the DREAM framework (Hoppe et al 2021 Comput. Phys. Commun. 268 108098). To minimize the obtained runaway currents an optimal range of injected deuterium quantities is found. This range is sensitive to the opacity of the plasma to Lyman radiation, which affects the ionization degree of deuterium, and thus avalanche runaway generation. The two-stage injection scheme, where dilution cooling is produced by deuterium before a radiative thermal quench caused by neon, reduces both the hot-tail seed and the localized transported heat load on the wall. However, during nuclear operation, additional runaway seed sources from the activated wall and tritium make it difficult to reach tolerably low runaway currents.

runaway electron

shattered pellet injection

plasma simulation

disruption mitigation

ITER

Author

Oskar Vallhagen

Chalmers, Physics, Subatomic, High Energy and Plasma Physics

Istvan Pusztai

Chalmers, Physics, Subatomic, High Energy and Plasma Physics

Mathias Hoppe

Chalmers, Physics, Subatomic, High Energy and Plasma Physics

S. L. Newton

Culham Centre for Fusion Energy

Tünde-Maria Fülöp

Chalmers, Physics, Subatomic, High Energy and Plasma Physics

Nuclear Fusion

0029-5515 (ISSN) 1741-4326 (eISSN)

Vol. 62 11 112004

Subject Categories

Energy Engineering

Other Physics Topics

Fusion, Plasma and Space Physics

DOI

10.1088/1741-4326/ac667e

More information

Latest update

10/19/2022