Tokamak GOLEM plasma parameters

This notebook estimates several parameters of the plasma in the context of tokamak fusion physics. These parameters include but are not limited to the safety factor, the electron temperature, electron pressure, plasma volume and electron thermal energy and electron energy confinement time. Other more general plasma parameters are calculated as well.

The formulas and explanations are mostly based on the book [1] WESSON, John. Tokamaks. 3. ed. Oxford: Clarendon press, 2004. ISBN 9780198509226. and the reader is encouraged to consult it for details.

The accuracy of these parameters stronly depends on the availability of the plasma position and size reconstruction.

Plasma presence determination

The following analysis makes sense only if a plasma was present in the discharge

If plasma position and size reconstruction is not available, the parameters of the chamber geometry are used for the minor and major plasma radii a and R, respectivelly.

Edge safety factor

On any given closed flux surface in the plasma in the tokamak the magnetic field line performs q transits in the toroidal angle ϕ per 1 one transit in the poloidal angle θ. The stronger the toroidal magnetic field is, the more stable the plasma becomes against various instabilities, especially against the kink instability which can occur for q<1. For this reason q is referred to as the safety factor.

In a simple tokamak with a circular cross-section (such as GOLEM) the poloidal magnetic field can be estimated at least at the very edge of the plasma from the total plasma current Ip enclosed by the plasma column of minor radius a and major radius R as Bθa=μ0Ip2πa

Typically, in a tokamak the toroidal magnetic field Bϕ is several times stronger than the poloidal magnetic field Bθa at the egde.

For a large aspect ratio tokamak (i.e. the inverse aspect ratio is small ϵ=aR<<1) such as GOLEM the safety factor at the edge on the last closed flux surface (LCFS) delimited by the limiter ring can be estimated as qa=aBϕRBθ

To obtain information on q and Bθ deeper inside the plasma torus one must have knowledge of or assume a specific profile for the toroidal current density jϕ. A common approximation for a tokamak such as GOLEM is a poloidally symmetric radial profile jϕ(r)=j0(1(ra))ν where r is the radius with respect to the plasma center and ν a so called "peaking factor". A common choice is ν=1 for a "parabolic" profile or ν=2 for a more peaked profile (likely more realistic). With the average current density defined as ja=Ipπa2 the maximum current density j0 can be estimated from the relation j0ja=ν+1

Under this assumption the safety factor in the plasma core (r=0) is reduced according to the relation qaq0=ν+1. which could result in the following profiles for the time when qa is the lowest (i.e. closest to an instability).

Electron temperature

The plasma is typically as conductive as copper, i.e. is a good conductor with a relatively low resitivity. However, whereas the resitivity of metals increases with temperature, the resitivity of a plasma decreases, because at higher timperatures collisions between particles become less frequent, leading to less resistance to their movement. While with higher particle density the number of collisions increases, the number of charge cariers also increases, so in the end the resistivity does not depend on density.

The simple, unmagnetized plasma resistivity derived by Spitzer ηs=0.51mee2lnΛ3ϵ02(2πkBTe)32 with the constants electron mass me, elementary charge e, vacuum permitivity ϵ0 and kB the Boltzmann constant. lnΛ is the so called Coulomb logarithm which has a weak dependence on density and temperature and for typical GOLEM plasmas can be held at lnΛ14. The factor 0.51 comes from more precise calculations which show that the parallel resitivity η=ηs (along the magnetic field-line the resistivity is not affected by the field) is halved compared to the classical (analytical) perpendicular resitivity η=1.96η though in reality the perpendicular resitivity can be higher due to anomalous transport (turbelence, etc.). If one is interested in the electron temperature Te in the units of electron-volts (typically used in the field), the relation is Te[eV]=kBeTe[K].

Additional corrections:

This results in ηmeasured=ηsZeff(1ϵ)2.

These considerations lead to the relation Te[eV]=1e2π(1.96Zeff(1ϵ)2ηmeasured3ϵ02mee2lnΛ)23

To estimate ηmeasured one can use Ohm's law in the form jϕ=σEϕ with the plasma conductivity σ=1ηmeasured. The toroidal electric field can be estimated from the loop voltage, but one must take into account inductive effects as well. Neglecting mutual inductances between e.g. the plasma and the chamber, the loop voltage induced in the plasma by the primary winding is "consumed" by the electric field and current inductance as Uloop=2πREϕ+(Li+Le)dIpdt where Li and Le are the internal and external plasma inductances, respectively. The external inductance of a closed toroidal current (assuming a uniform current density) is Le=μ0Rln(8Ra74). The internal plasma inductance is usually parametrized as Li=μ0Rli2 where li is the so called normalized internal inductance which depends on the Bθ (or rather current) profile. For the assumed current profile an accurate estimate is liln(1.65+0.89ν).

In the beginning of the discharge the creationg of the poloidal magnetic field by the plasma current diminishes Eϕ, and at the end the plasma current and its field dissipates, enhancing Eϕ. With the estimated Eϕ, one can obtain an average temperature estimate with ja and a (higher) core plasma temperature estimate with j0, respectively.

Plasma density and volume estimate

A good estimate of the (line-averaged) electron density (concentration) is typically obtained from the microwave interferoemter. In the absence of this diagnostic an order-of-magntude estimate can be obtained using the ideal gas law applied to the initial inert state of the working gas. Since the whole chamber has a volume of V060l, the working gas with the pre-discharge stationary equilibrium pressure p0 at the room temperature T0300K will is expected to be composed of N molecules according to the relation p0V0=NkBT0. One can assume that for a gven working gas the molecule dissasociates into ka atoms which can the fully ionaize giving ke electrons. Therefore, one can estimate the order-of-magnitude number of electrons (an upper estimate due to only partial ionaization of the working gas) as Nekakep0V0kBT0

To estimate the actual electron density ne , i.e. number of electrons in m3 one must estimate also the plasma volume Vp. Assuming a perfect plasma torus, its volume is tha cartesian product of its poloidal cross section (circular - πa2) along the toroidal axis of the torus (length 2πR), together Vp=2π2Ra2. The plasma density is then neNe/Vp.

Plasma electron thermal energy balance

The thermal energy of electrons in the plasma Wth,e evolves according to the applied heating power PH and the (turbulent and radiative) losses summarized by the loss power PL as dWth,edt=PHPL The electron thermal energy can be approximated suing the plasma electron pressure pe=nekBTe as Wth,eTekBneVp.

In the absence of auxiliary heating systems such as NBI an ECRH, the only component of the heating power is the resistive (ohmic) heating power density due to the toroidal electric field and current Eϕjϕ . Assuming a uniform distribution of this heating density, the total ohmic heating power can be estimated as PH=PΩ=EϕjϕaVp. Due to the geometric assumptions used above, this is equivalent to the total induced power with the change of the poloidal magnetic energy subtracted PH=UloopIpddt(12(Le+Li)Ip2)

A figure of merit critical for thermonuclear fusion is the characteristic time scale at which the thermal energy would be exponentially depleted under the assumption that the loss power is proportional to the stored thermal energy PLWth. This time scale is called the energy confinement time τE and for the electron energy it can be estimated from the modified electron thermal energy balance with PLWth,e/τE,e dWth,edt=PHWth,eτE,e

Summary and overview