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    http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01xd07gw38k| Title: | Integrated Modeling of Plasma-Induced Material Migration in NSTX-U | 
| Authors: | Nichols, Jacob Haines | 
| Advisors: | Jaworski, Michael A | 
| Contributors: | Astrophysical Sciences—Plasma Physics Program Department | 
| Keywords: | Material migration Plasma-material interactions SOL modeling Wall conditioning WallDYN Whole-device modeling | 
| Subjects: | Plasma physics | 
| Issue Date: | 2018 | 
| Publisher: | Princeton, NJ : Princeton University | 
| Abstract: | During the course of tokamak operation, material is routinely eroded from plasma facing components and transported to other regions of the machine. This net-reshaping process will lead to many challenges in a high duty cycle magnetic fusion reactor, and is also highly relevant to the wall conditioning process in current experiments. Proper modeling of this mechanism requires a global treatment of the entire tokamak, and integration of tightly coupled plasma and surface processes. This thesis focuses on extending and applying the WallDYN mixed-material migration code [1] [2], which couples local erosion and deposition processes with plasma impurity transport in a non-iterative, self-consistent manner that maintains overall material balance. NSTX-U operated in 2016 with carbon PFCs, periodically conditioned with boron-containing films to suppress oxygen impurities. However, oxygen levels tended to return to a pre-conditioned state following repeated plasma exposure, and this occurred on a faster time scale when conditioning with less boron. This C/B/O migration is interpretively modeled with WallDYN, which successfully reproduces observed trends in oxygen evolution. A new model for spatially inhomogenous mixed material films has been developed for WallDYN, which allows for the differentiation between conditioning films of varying thicknesses. A boron coverage model for the NSTX-U glow discharge boronization process is also developed. These new capabilities improve WallDYN agreement with observed NSTX-U spectroscopic data by at least a factor of 2. As part of the integrated model, plasma backgrounds representing NSTX-U H-modes and L-modes are calculated using OSM-EIRENE, constrained by a combination of NSTX-U data and NSTX SOLPS calculations. The effect of modifying the assumed parallel SOL profile is examined, with the result that inner divertor-directed flows turn the outer divertor from a region of net boron deposition to one of net boron erosion. Plasma impurity transport calculations are carried out with DIVIMP, and mixed-material sputtering calculations are carried out for a range of possible surfaces with SDTRIMSP. WallDYN modeling of C/Li/O migration in NSTX is presented, utilizing OSM-EIRENE calculations of lithiated NSTX plasmas. An adatom model of temperature-enhanced sputtering has been added to WallDYN, and the effect of various surface temperature scenarios is examined. A sensitivity study of surface binding energies used in WallDYN sputtering calculations is carried out, finding that mixed material effects become dominant when the system contains both tightly- and weakly- bound elements (such as C and Li). | 
| URI: | http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01xd07gw38k | 
| Alternate format: | The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog: catalog.princeton.edu | 
| Type of Material: | Academic dissertations (Ph.D.) | 
| Language: | en | 
| Appears in Collections: | Plasma Physics | 
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nichols_princeton_0181D_12450.pdf | 12.07 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Download | 
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