11–15 Oct 2021
Virtual in Consorzio RFX
Europe/Rome timezone

Verification and validation of gyrokinetic and kinetic-MHD simulations for the internal kink instability in the DIII-D tokamak

14 Oct 2021, 14:50
1h 50m
Virtual in Consorzio RFX

Virtual in Consorzio RFX

Poster 8. Experimental validation of theoretical models and diagnostics development POSTER SESSION

Speaker

Guillaume Brochard (University of California, Irvine)

Description

Verification and validation of the internal kink instability in tokamak have been performed for both gyrokinetic (GTC) and kinetic-MHD codes (GAM-solver, M3D-C1-K, NOVA, XTOR-K). Using realistic magnetic geometry and plasma profiles from the same equilibrium reconstruction of the DIII-D shot #141216, these codes exhibit excellent agreements for the growth rate and mode structure of the n=1 internal kink mode in ideal MHD simulations by suppressing all kinetic effects. The simulated radial mode structure agrees quantitatively with the electron cyclotron emission measurement after adjusting, within the experimental uncertainty, the q=1 flux-surface location in the equilibrium reconstruction. Equilibrium plasma pressure gradient and compressible magnetic perturbation strongly destabilize the kink, while poloidal variations of the equilibrium current density stabilize the kink. Furthermore, kinetic effects of thermal ions are found to decrease the kink growth rate in kinetic-MHD simulations, but increase the kink growth rate in gyrokinetic simulations, possibly due to the additional drive of the ion temperature gradient and parallel electric field. Kinetic thermal electrons are found to have negligible effects on the internal kink instability.

Author

Guillaume Brochard (University of California, Irvine)

Co-authors

Jian Bao (Chinese Academy of Sciences) Chang Liu (Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory) Nikolai Gorelenkov Ge Dong (Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory) Joseph Mc.Clenaghan (Oak Ridge National Laboratory) Xishuo Wei (University of California, Irvine) Gyungjin Choi (University of California, Irvine) Javier Nicolau (University of California, Irvine) Pengfei Liu (University of California, Irvine) Z. L. Zhang (Chinese Academy of Sciences) Hinrich Lütjens (Ecole Polytechnique, Institut Polytechnique de Paris) William Heidbrink (University of California, Irvine) Zhihong Lin (University of California, Irvine)

Presentation materials