Nuclear Materials and Energy (Oct 2022)

Modeling the effect of nitrogen recycling on the erosion and leakage of tungsten impurities from the SAS-VW divertor in DIII-D during nitrogen gas injection

  • Matthew S. Parsons,
  • Gregory Sinclair,
  • Tyler Abrams

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33
p. 101254

Abstract

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The new SAS-VW divertor in DIII-D has tungsten-coated components to enable the study of tungsten erosion and leakage from a closed, slot-like divertor. A proposed method of actively managing the tungsten impurities is to inject low-Z impurities, such as nitrogen, into the Scrape-off-Layer (SOL) to modify the conditions in the plasma boundary and in turn manipulate both the erosion and subsequent transport of tungsten. Nitrogen injection from the SOL crown has been modeled using SOLPS-ITER to calculate the background plasma including the intrinsic carbon and the injected nitrogen impurities, and subsequently DIVIMP has been used to calculate the tungsten erosion and transport on top of the background plasma solution. This workflow has been used to model scenarios at a variety of nitrogen injection rates with different assumptions about the nitrogen recycling at the target. In the scenario modeled here, an optimal nitrogen injection rate around 3–4 ×1020 N/s is found to reduce the amount of tungsten reaching the core by a factor of about 2.4. However, when the nitrogen recycling rate at the divertor targets is high, the nitrogen redistributes within the slot leading to increased tungsten sputtering, and the range of injection rates resulting in tungsten mitigation becomes narrower.

Keywords