Litcius/Paper detail

Thermal quench and current profile relaxation dynamics in massive-material-injection-triggered tokamak disruptions

E. Nardon, Di Hu, F.J. Artola, D. Bonfiglio, M. Hoelzl, A. Boboc, P. Carvalho, S. Gerasimov, G. T. A. Huijsmans, V. Mitterauer, N. Schwarz, H.J. Sun, the JOREK Team, JET contributors

2021Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract 3D non-linear magnetohydrodynamic simulations of a disruption triggered by a massive injection of argon gas in JET are performed with the JOREK code. The key role of the thermal drive of the m = 2, n = 1 tearing mode (i.e. the drive from helical cooling inside the island) in the disruption process is highlighted by varying the amplitude and position of the argon source across simulations, and also during a simulation. In cases where this drive persists in spite of the development of magnetic stochasticity, which is favoured by moving the argon source in an ad hoc way from the plasma edge into the 2/1 island at some point in the simulation, a relaxation in the region <mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" overflow="scroll"> <mml:mrow> <mml:mi>q</mml:mi> <mml:mo>⩽</mml:mo> <mml:mn>2</mml:mn> </mml:mrow> </mml:math> (roughly) takes place. This relaxation generates a plasma current spike comparable to the experimental one. Simulations are compared in detail to measurements via synthetic diagnostics, validating the model to some degree.

Topics & Concepts

TokamakArgonRelaxation (psychology)PlasmaMagnetohydrodynamic driveJet (fluid)PhysicsThermalMaterials scienceAtomic physicsMechanicsMagnetohydrodynamicsThermodynamicsNuclear physicsSocial psychologyPsychologyMagnetic confinement fusion researchIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsSuperconducting Materials and Applications