• DocumentCode
    3209839
  • Title

    Dust dynamics and radiation in fusion plasmas

  • Author

    Smirnov, R.D. ; Rosenberg, M. ; Pigarov, A.Yu. ; Yu, J.H. ; Roquemore, A.L. ; Terry, J.L. ; Krasheninnikov, S.I. ; Mendis, D.A. ; West, W.P.

  • Author_Institution
    UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
  • fYear
    2009
  • fDate
    1-5 June 2009
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    1
  • Abstract
    Summary form only given. Dust is commonly found in current magnetic fusion devices. In reactors like ITER dust can pose safety hazards and impact plasma performance. However, the properties, generation rate, dynamics, and role of dust in fusion plasmas are still not well understood. In this work we simulate dynamics of dust particles in tokamaks with the dust transport, DUSTT, code and analyze the visibility of dust particles of different sizes in fusion plasmas by modern fast framing cameras. Using the DUSTT code, the dust density, radius and velocity distributions at different locations in the edge plasma are simulated and evaluated against the available experimental data. We compare the simulated dust trajectories with ones experimentally measured on NSTX with the fast camera imaging technique. The imaging is possible because dust heating and ablation by plasma creates two sources of radiation: thermal radiation from the heated dust particle and radiation from the ablation cloud interacting with the surrounding plasma. The analysis of spectral characteristics of the radiation can provide information as on dust (size, temperature, composition), as well as on dust-plasma interaction processes (ablation dynamics, local plasma parameters). We calculated the intensity of both the thermal radiation from a carbon dust particle and the radiation from the ablation cloud surrounding it for various plasma parameters. This allows to estimate minimal size of the visible dust and the ablation cloud characteristics in different tokamak plasma regions. We have also analyzed dust radius distribution resulting from laser scattering measurements on DIII-D taking into account non-Rayleigh regimes of light scattering as well as dust evaporation due to heating by laser radiation.
  • Keywords
    Tokamak devices; dusty plasmas; heat radiation; plasma boundary layers; plasma density; plasma heating by laser; plasma simulation; plasma toroidal confinement; plasma transport processes; DIII-D; DUSTT code; ITER; NSTX; ablation cloud; ablation dynamics; carbon dust particle; dust ablation; dust density distribution; dust dynamics; dust evaporation; dust heating; dust radius distribution; dust trajectories; dust transport; dust velocity distribution; dust-plasma interaction; edge plasma; fast camera imaging; fast framing cameras; fusion plasmas; laser radiation heating; laser scattering measurements; light scattering; local plasma parameters; magnetic fusion devices; nonRayleigh regimes; plasma performance; plasma simulation; safety hazards; spectral characteristics; thermal radiation; tokamaks; Clouds; Dusty plasma; Plasma density; Plasma devices; Plasma measurements; Plasma properties; Plasma simulation; Plasma sources; Plasma temperature; Plasma transport processes;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Plasma Science - Abstracts, 2009. ICOPS 2009. IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    San Diego, CA
  • ISSN
    0730-9244
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-2617-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/PLASMA.2009.5227235
  • Filename
    5227235