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先進プラズマ研究開発

19th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference

掲載日:2018年12月26日更新
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Characterization of Axisymmetric Disruption Dynamics toward VDE Avoidance in Tokamaks

Y. Nakamura1), R. Yoshino1), R.S. Granetz2), G. Pautasso3), O. Gruber3) and S.C. Jardin4)
1) Naka Fusion Research Establishment, JAERI, Naka-machi, Ibaraki 311-0193, Japan
2) Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA
3) MPI fur Plasmaphysik, EURATOM Association, D-85748 Garching, Germany
4) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton University, New Jersey 08543, USA.

Abstract.
Experiments and axisymmetric MHD simulations on tokamak disruptions have explicated the underlying mechanisms of Vertical Displacement Events (VDEs) and a diversity of disruption dynamics. First, the neutral point, which is known as an advantageous vertical plasma position to avoiding VDEs during the plasma current quench, is shown to be fairly insensitive to plasma shape and current profile parameters. Secondly, a rapid flattening of the plasma current profile frequently seen at thermal quench is newly clarified to play a substantial role in dragging a single null-diverted plasma vertically towards the divertor. As a consequence, the occurrence of downward-going VDEs predominates over the upward-going ones in bottom-diverted discharges. This dragging effect is absent in up-down symmetric limiter discharges. These simulation results are consistent with experiments. Together with the attractive force that arises from passive shell currents and essentially vanishes at the neutral point, the dragging effect explains many details of the VDE dynamics over the whole period of the disruptive termination.