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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20061/19 Filaments in the SOL and their impact to the first wall EURATOM - IPP Association, Garching, Germany A. Herrmann, A. Kirk, A. Schmid, B. Koch, M. Laux, M. Maraschek, H.W. Mueller, J. Neuhauser, V. Rohde, M. Tsalas E. Wolfrum, ASDEX Upgrade team
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20062/19 Wall and divertor heat load mapped to midplane Plasma (R) 7 mm a few mm a few cm ELM heat load to outboard limiter Sepparatrix Rule of thumb: The wall heat load is comparable to the heat flux in the wing of the divertor profile.
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20063/19 Filamentary heat load Filaments in the far SOL are a small contribution to the ELM energy balance. They are no problem at the divertor target. But the parallel heat flow is up to 100 MW/m 2 in AUG. Requires tilted structures at the inner wall. Extrapolation to ITER. Eich, T., et al., Physical Review Letters, 2003. 91(19). Eich, T., et al., Plasma Physics Controlled Fusion, 2005. 47
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20064/19 3 ELM phases - diagnostics A. Kirk et al, PPCF 47 (2005) 315–333 Filament evolution in the pedestal region Hot filament near to the separatrix. Radial travveling into the far SOL, attached to the divertor. Thomson scattering Magnetic probes Langmuir probesThermography Li-beam …
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20065/19 Outline Combined measurement of heat and particle flux in the mid-plane ELM structure and correlations Wall impact – e-folding lengths Particle flux and heat load Qualitative explanation Filament expansion – Prediction and experiment Summary
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20066/19 Diagnostics Combined measurements Langmuir probes Reciprocating Filament probe Thermography Magnetic pick up coils Probes are toroidal connected along field lines. Outside the shadow of the protection limiter. RP 5 mm in front of the ICRH limiter (connection length into the divertor about 5 m).
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20067/19 Discharge scenario for radial SOL scan Move the probes in front of the limiter. Move the plasma away from the Limiter. Radial scan 3.5 -12 cm Discharge parameters I p = 0.8; 1.0 MA B t = -2; -3 T n/n gw = 0.6 W mhd = const (500 kJ) P heat = 5; 6.6 MW NI q 95 = 3.5-6.5
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20068/19 Magnetic configuration Field line connection to the divertor entrance. No effectd from the 2nd X-point Inner divertor -> heat shield But, large gap.
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 20069/19 Correlation between signals Filaments are seen on all probes (Langmuir pins, heat flux, magnetic) Magnetic activity strongest at the beginning of an ELM. j sat signals are correlated on a short spatial scale (Mach probe). Parallel mass flow towards the outer lower divertor (M ab. 0.1). Single filaments are detected as heat load:
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200610/19 Heat load to the probe head is non-uniform 6 cm t exposure = 2 μs T frame = 100 μs Leading edge Rotation in co-current direction ‘Sharp’ edge in the limiter shadow
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200611/19 Radial decay in the far SOL Decay of maximum values. Langmuir probes and heat flux have the same e-folding lengths! Filament probe is about one radial e-folding length behind the reciprocating probe. For this plot:
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200612/19 Radial decay is independent on the strength of the filament The radial decay is independent on the strength of the filament. (Statistics, we do not follow a single filament) Scatter due to different source strength or different radial velocity (less time for parallel convection) Both Langmuir probes have comparable decay lengths. Larger scatter for heat flux decay. Heat flux decay is comparable (or larger) than the particle flux decay (j sat )
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200613/19 Heat flux and ELM energy balance The e-folding length is dominated by the density decay (T e, T i = const) Qualitative explanation We are measuring in the far SOL (away from the steep gradient near to the separatrix) The electrons have lost their energy (modeling, experiment). Loosing particles (and energy) without altering the temperature. Convective losses but collisional far SOL.
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200614/19 Heat loss channels n = 2e19m -3 T e = 0.1 T i ~n ITER Heat conduction (Kaufmann S 112, Stangeby S 394) Heat convection (ions) Ions (D) electrons
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200615/19 Collisional SOL Collisional edge No significant heat exchange between electron and ions ; electron collision time (Wesson 2.15.3) ; ion collison time ; energy exchange time
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200616/19 The ion temperature is below 100 eV This is consistent with T e < T i : Heat load is dominated by ions: Experimentally:
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200617/19 Radial blob velocity Filament in contact with the wall – sheath resistivity Far from the X-point. S.I. Krasheninikov, PL A 283 (2001) 368 Ion gyro ratio/ poloidal sizeBlob / background density Larger filaments are slower. Faster with increasing density. Blob velocity
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200618/19 Radial blob velocity From experiment: Poloidal size of 1-2 cm Ion temperature <100 eV Qualitative agreement with prediction. But: Size dependence?
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A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto - 200619/19 Summary and conclusions The heat and particle decay length is a few centimeters in the far SOL Particle and heat flux decay length are comparable. The decay is dominated by ion-convection (energy and particles). With a low Mach number (midplane, flow towards the lower divertor). The ion temperature in the filament is below 100 eV. The radial velocity from experiment and model is in agreement. The fraction of ELM energy to the wall decreases with ELM size
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