Role of turbulent separatrix tangle in the improvement of the integrated pedestal and heat exhaust issue for stationary-operation tokamak fusion reactors

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Abstract

The magnetic separatrix surface is designed to provide the final and critical confinement to the hot stationary-operation core plasma in modern tokamak reactors in the absence of an external magnetic perturbation (MP) or transient magneto-hydrodynamic perturbation, while diverting the exhaust heat to divertor plates. All the stationary operational boundary plasma studies and reactor designs have been performed under this assumption. However, there has been a long-standing suspicion that a stationary-operation tokamak plasma even without external MPs or edge localized modes (ELMs) activities may not have a stable closed separatrix surface, especially near the magnetic X-point. Here, the first gyrokinetic numerical observation is reported that the divertor separatrix surface, due to homoclinic tangles caused by intrinsic electromagnetic turbulence, is not a stable closed surface in a stationary operation phase even without MPs or ELMs. Unlike the MP- or ELM-driven homoclinic tangles that could cause deleterious effects to core confinement or divertor plates, it is found that the micro-turbulence driven homoclinic tangles could connect the divertor plasma to the pedestal plasma in a constructive way by broadening the divertor heat-exhaust footprint and weakening the pedestal slope to the ELM-safe direction. Micro-turbulent homoclinic tangles can open a new research direction in understanding and controlling these two most troublesome and non-locally connected edge-plasma issues in a tokamak fusion reactor.

Original languageEnglish
Article number056041
JournalNuclear Fusion
Volume64
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2024

Funding

First authors acknowledge the XGC team members for the valuable discussions and the enabling of mathematics and computer science technologies in making these simulations possible on the leadership class computers. This work is mostly funded by US DOE FES and ASCR to the SciDAC Partnership Center for High-fidelity Boundary Plasma Simulation (HBPS). Computing resources provided by OLCF and ALCF via the INCITE program, and by NERSC via the ERCAP allocation.

Keywords

  • divertor heat load
  • edge
  • gyrokinetic
  • homoclinic tangle
  • pedestal
  • separatrix
  • tokamak

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