Citation:
Gogoleva, A., Tribaldos, V., Reynolds-Barredo, J. M., & Beidler, C. D. (2020). Statistical description of collisionless α-particle transport in cases of broken symmetry: from ITER to quasi-toroidally symmetric stellarators. In Nuclear Fusion, 60(5), 056009-0560024
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España) Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Sponsor:
The authors would like to thank R. Sanchez, A. Bustos and J.
Alcuson for fruitful discussions. This work was supported in
part by the Spanish project ENE2012-33219 and the Erasmus
Mundus Program: International Doctoral College in Fusion
Science and Engineering FUSION-DC. Part of this research
was carried at the Max-Planck Institute for Plasma Physics in Greifswald (Germany), whose hospitality is gratefully
acknowledged. MOCA calculations were done in Uranus, a
supercomputer cluster located at Universidad Carlos III de
Madrid and funded jointly by EU-FEDER and the Spanish
Government via Project No. UNC313-4E-2361, ENE2009-
12213-C03-03, ENE2012-33219 and ENE2015-68265
The confinement of alfa-particles is vital for any future fusion reactor. Unfortunately, the inevitable appearance of inhomogeneities in the magnetic field activates the non-collisional transport by virtue of ripple trapping and ripple induced stochastization.The confinement of alfa-particles is vital for any future fusion reactor. Unfortunately, the inevitable appearance of inhomogeneities in the magnetic field activates the non-collisional transport by virtue of ripple trapping and ripple induced stochastization. While a large and growing body of literature is devoted to the mitigation of these channels of losses for future reactor designs, far too little attention has been paid to characterize the statistical nature of the underlying stochastic process, which is generally assumed to be diffusive. Here the effect of breaking the toroidal symmetry on collisionless alfa-particle transport is analyzed numerically with a guiding center orbit following code MOCA for several configurations: a perfectly toroidally symmetric ITER-like tokamak and four stellarators with different levels of quasi-toroidal symmetry. Statistical characterization of banana widths, bouncing times and banana center evolution put into question the classical convection/diffusion approach to adequately describe collisionless alfa-particle transport as the magnetic configuration departs from toroidal symmetry.[+][-]