Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California San Diego 1 , La Jolla, California 92093, USA
2. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory 2 , Livermore, California 94550, USA
Abstract
The work presents numerical simulation studies of the role that dynamic plasma recycling on the main wall and divertor target surfaces plays in transient edge plasma transport phenomena, such as edge localized modes (ELMs). The studies are performed by coupling the edge plasma transport code UEDGE [Rognlien et al., J. Nucl. Mater. 196–198, 347 (1992)] and the wall reaction–diffusion transport code FACE [Smirnov et al., Fusion Sci. Technol. 71, 75 (2017)]. The two-dimensional, time-dependent, two-way coupling of the codes, in a realistic tokamak geometry, is accomplished using the Integrated Plasma Simulator framework [Elwasif et al., in 18th Euromicro Conference on Parallel, Distributed and Network-Based Processing (PDP 2010), Pisa, Italy (IEEE, 2010), pp. 419–427] for all modeled material plasma boundaries. The simulations show that dynamic plasma recycling has substantially different characteristics on the main wall and on the divertor plates. It is demonstrated that during an ELM cycle the outer wall can dynamically absorb and release a number of particles comparable to that expelled by the ELM from the core plasma, by far exceeding the dynamic retention capacity of the divertor surfaces. The resulting evolution of the edge and divertor plasma conditions during an ELM cycle is analyzed.