Liquid jets for fast plasma termination in tokamaks
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Nuclear Fusion
- Vol. 37 (7) , 955-966
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0029-5515/37/7/i04
Abstract
Recent simulations by Putvinskij et al. (PSI Conference, 1996) have shown that introducing impurities into the plasma in order to mitigate adverse disruption effects in ITER may actually be deleterious because of a potentially unwelcome phenomenon: generation of multi-MeV runaway electrons by the collisional avalanche mechanism (Rosenbluth, M.N., et al., in Fusion Energy 1996 (Proc. 16th Int. Conf. Montreal, 1996), Vol. 2, IAEA, Vienna (in press) Paper FP-26). The injection of a liquid hydrogen jet to deliver a massive density increase is proposed as a means of avoiding runaways, while providing the same beneficial effects as impurities. A discussion of many jet related topics, such as ablation/penetration, jet breakup time and stability, is presented. Owing to an ablation pressure instability, it is predicted that the jet will quickly break up into a regular chain of droplets with dimensions of approximately the size of the jet radius. It is found that while deep penetration in the plasma can easily be achieved, bubble growth and disruptive boiling (hashing) during the propagation in the vacuum gap between the nozzle exit and the plasma are the main processes limiting the jet survival time. Calculations indicate that for ITER reference parameters, the jet can remain coherent in vacuum for a distance ~1 m before disintegrating. On the basis of this present understanding, the prospect for the safe termination of ITER discharges by high density liquid jet injection appears promisingKeywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- An international pellet ablation databaseNuclear Fusion, 1997
- Use of impurity pellets to control energy dissipation during disruptionNuclear Fusion, 1996
- Emergency discharge quench or rampdown by a noble gas pelletNuclear Fusion, 1995
- Geometrical, kinetic and atomic physics effects in a two dimensional time dependent fluid simulation of ablating fuel pelletsNuclear Fusion, 1994
- Vertical displacement events and halo currentsPlasma Physics and Controlled Fusion, 1993
- Impurity influx model of fast tokamak disruptionsNuclear Fusion, 1992
- Disruptions in JETNuclear Fusion, 1989
- Characteristics, control, and uses of liquid streams in spaceAIAA Journal, 1987
- Magnetic-field distortion near an ablating hydrogen pelletNuclear Fusion, 1980
- Effect of transonic flow in the ablation cloud on the lifetime of a solid hydrogen pellet in a plasmaPhysics of Fluids, 1978