Nuclear Fusion (Jan 2024)

Assessing the impact of alpha particles on thermal confinement in JET D-T plasmas through global GENE-Tango simulations

  • A. Di Siena,
  • J. Garcia,
  • R. Bilato,
  • K. Kirov,
  • J. Varela,
  • A. Bañón Navarro,
  • Hyun-Tae Kim,
  • C. Challis,
  • J. Hobirk,
  • A. Kappatou,
  • E. Lerche,
  • D. Spong,
  • C. Angioni,
  • T. Görler,
  • E. Poli,
  • M. Bergmann,
  • F. Jenko,
  • JET contributors

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-4326/ad9489
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 65, no. 1
p. 016050

Abstract

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The capability of the global, electromagnetic gyrokinetic GENE code interfaced with the transport Tango solver is exploited to address the impact of fusion alpha particles (in their dual role of fast particles and heating source) on plasma profiles and performance at JET in the discharges with the highest quasi-stationary peak fusion power during the DTE2 experimental campaigns. Employing radially global nonlinear electromagnetic GENE-Tango simulations, we compare results with/without alpha particles and alpha heating. Our findings reveal that alpha particles have a negligible impact on turbulent transport, with GENE-Tango converging to similar plasma profiles regardless of their inclusion as a kinetic species in GENE. On the other hand, alpha heating is found to contribute to the peaking of the electron temperature profiles, leading to a 1 keV drop on the on-axis electron temperature when alpha heating is neglected in Tango. The minimal impact of alpha particles on turbulent transport in this JET discharge–despite this being the shot with the highest fusion output–is attributed to the low content of fusion alpha in this discharge. To assess the potential impact of alpha particles on turbulent transport in regimes with higher alpha particle density, as expected in ITER and fusion reactors, we artificially increased the alpha particle concentration to levels expected for ITER. By performing global nonlinear GENE standalone simulations, we found that increasing the alpha particle density beyond five times the nominal value lead to significant overall turbulence destabilization. These results demonstrate that an increased alpha particle concentration can significantly impact transport properties under simulated JET experimental conditions. However, these findings cannot be directly extrapolated to ITER due to the substantial differences in parameters such as plasma size, magnetic field, plasma current, and thermal pressure.

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