PHYS03 - The impact of York’s plasma science on the design and construction of ITER
Submitting Institution
University of YorkUnit of Assessment
PhysicsSummary Impact Type
TechnologicalResearch Subject Area(s)
Physical Sciences: Atomic, Molecular, Nuclear, Particle and Plasma Physics
Summary of the impact
Although the world will have some time to wait until the full impact of
fusion energy is realised, there is substantial non-academic impact from
plasma science on the design of ITER. This €13Bn+ international facility,
under construction in France, is designed to demonstrate the technical
feasibility of fusion energy. Our research on plasma eruptions (like mini
solar flares), identified the need to protect ITER plasma facing
components from large, localised thermal loads. In addition, the antennas
for radio-frequency heating of ITER plasmas needed to be designed to take
account of the filamentary density structures that we predicted to be
associated with these eruptions.
Underpinning research
The most advanced fusion energy device, called a tokamak, confines plasma
using magnetic fields. Tokamak plasmas are vulnerable to a sequence of
repetitive plasma eruptions called Edge Localised Modes (ELMs — like mini
"solar flares"). Professor Howard Wilson developed the fundamental theory
for these eruptions that predicted: (i) ELMs occur when the edge plasma
pressure gradient exceeds a critical value [1-3] and (ii) the eruptions
violently eject filaments of hot plasma that could strike (and damage) the
components of the fusion reactor (2004-present) [4]. The latter prediction
was important as prior to this theory it was thought that ELMs blew off a
uniform shell of plasma into the tokamak exhaust region with little impact
on other components. The theory and its consequences were not universally
accepted, so following his move to York in 2005, Professor Wilson worked
with experimentalists on the MAST tokamak at Culham Centre for Fusion
Energy to confirm the prediction of the existence of filaments using high
speed camera images of the plasma [5,6]; erupting filaments during ELMs
have since been seen on all the world's leading tokamaks, transforming our
picture of what an ELM is. Specifically, the theory predicts, and
experiment observes, that hot plasma filaments from ELMs can strike
tokamak components, producing localised high thermal loads. While these
thermal loads are tolerable on today's tokamaks, on ITER where the thermal
energy will be much greater, they are likely to cause excessive damage.
Without Wilson's theory to guide experiments to search for filamentary
structures, it is unlikely they would have been detected in today's
tokamak experiments (they exist for just 50 microseconds, and travel at
10's km/s). Consequently, the threat they pose to ITER components may not
have been appreciated, and the necessary additional protection not built
into the design of components.
The initial theory for the nonlinear evolution of ELMs, including the
prediction of erupting hot plasma filaments, was developed by Professor
Wilson in 2004, just before he moved to York in 2005. However, it was not
universally accepted at that time, so he continued to work in this area,
quantifying the theory's predictions [4] and working with experimental
colleagues to test it against experiments on MAST [5, 6]. The theory
guided new high performance computer simulations of ELMs by the York group
and others [7]. These experiments and simulations confirmed the theory and
firmly established filamentary eruptions during ELMs as a key issue for
future tokamaks. In 2006, Professor Wilson was awarded a £658k EPSRC grant
to simulate plasma eruptions on high performance computers [11]. This
funded the development at York of a new ELM simulation code in 2009,
called BOUT++ [8], led by Dr Ben Dudson initially as a post-doc at York
and then as a Lecturer there since 2009. BOUT++ is an on-going project
working towards a quantitative predictive capability for ELM filaments on
ITER [8-10]. Prof Wilson was awarded the 2013 American Physical Society
"John Dawson Award for Excellence in Plasma Physics Research" with three
US collaborators, for work that includes this research.
References to the research
Journals listed in the references below are all peer reviewed; citation
count from Web of Science
Key references for York staff on plasma eruptions
[1] H R Wilson, et al Magneto-hydrodynamic stability of the H-mode
transport barrier as a model for edge-localised modes: an overview
Plas Phys Contr Fusion 48 A71 (2006) (51 citations)
[2] P B Snyder, K H Burrell, H R Wilson, et al Stability and dynamics
of the edge pedestal in the low collisionality regime: physics
mechanisms for steady state ELM-free operation Nucl Fusion 47
961 (2007) (64 citations)
[3] H R Wilson, Invited talk at IAEA Technical meeting on H-mode physics
and transport barriers Magneto-hydrodynamic stability of the H-mode
transport barrier as a model for edge-localised modes: an overview
(2005)
[4] H.R. WILSON, et al Proceedings of the 21st IAEA Fusion Energy
Conference, Chengdu, on CD-ROM: IAEA-CN-149, paperTH/4-1Rb (2006)
[5] A Kirk, H R Wilson, et al Structure of ELMs in MAST and the
implications for energy deposition Plas Phys Contr Fusion 47
315 (2005) (48 citations)
[6] A. Kirk, B. Koch, R. Scannell, H.R. Wilson, et al Evolution of
filaments during Edge Localized Modes in the MAST tokamak, Phys Rev
Lett 96 185001 (2006) (64 citations)
[7] P B Snyder, H R Wilson and X Q Xu Progress in the
peeling-ballooning model of edge-localised modes: numerical studies of
nonlinear dynamics Phys Plasmas 12 056115 (2005) (79
citations)
[8] B D Dudson, et al; BOUT++: A framework for parallel plasma fluid
simulations Computer Physics Communications 180 1467 (2009)
(22 citations)
[9] X Q Xu, B Dudson, P B Snyder, M V Umansky and H R Wilson "Nonlinear
simulations of peeling-ballooning modes with anomalous electron
viscosity and their role in edge localized mode crashes" Phys Rev
Lett 105 175005 (2010) (14 citations)
[10] B D Dudson, X Q Xu, M V Umansky, H R Wilson and P B Snyder
"Simulation of edge localized modes using BOUT++" Plas. Physics Control.
Fusion 53 054005 (2011) (7 citations)
[11] EPSRC grant EP/D065399/1; PI H R Wilson (University of York);
"Theory of Explosive Plasma Instabilities" (2006-2010) £658k
Details of the impact
A key step to fusion energy is the construction of the €13Bn+ ITER
tokamak, scheduled for completion towards the end of the decade. ITER is
not an academic research facility: its goal is to integrate plasma
science, technologies and materials science to provide the first
demonstration of the technical feasibility of fusion energy. Furthermore,
the construction of ITER involves industrial partners across the world,
including the UK, who benefit from the contracts it provides and the
technical skills it develops. Research that has an impact on the technical
feasibility of constructing ITER is therefore a non-academic impact,
immediately benefitting all the international partners involved in the
project.
Research performed at York on ELMs has had an impact on the ITER design
in three areas: (1) design of components close to the plasma surface; (2)
radio-frequency plasma heating systems, and (3) developing ELM control
techniques. Before our prediction that ELMs eject hot filaments of plasma,
it was thought that most of the heat lost in these events would be
transferred smoothly over the exhaust region at the bottom of the tokamak.
To handle the high heat loads expected, this is made from tungsten on
ITER. With our new prediction that hot plasma filaments could be ejected
far from the core, concern started to grow that they could damage other
components close to the plasma if not protected. This became a key issue
for ITER.
The plasma physics research for ITER is carried out by the research
institutions of the ITER parties (European Union, Russia, United States,
Japan, South Korea, China and India), coordinated by seven International
Tokamak Physics Activity (ITPA) Groups which operate under the auspices of
ITER (http://www.iter.org/org/team/fst/itpa). The Pedestal and Edge
Physics ITPA Group is responsible for research into ELMs, ensuring the
science of the international research community is fed into the ITER
design and that urgent research needs for the construction of ITER are
addressed. As a result of his contributions, Prof Wilson was appointed
chair of this group of the world's top experts in this field (about 35)
during 2007-2011 (he remains a formally appointed EU member). This
position provides a strong pathway to impact on ITER for Prof Wilson's
research on plasma filaments, which has now grown into a major research
activity of the group because of its importance for fusion. Specific
examples of the impact of York on the ITER design are :
(1) The detail design of ITER's first wall components: these have to
withstand the localised time-averaged heat fluxes from the ELMs which are
predicted to concentrate on particular areas of the first wall.
Predictions of the ELM filament structure have been used to evaluate the
most exposed locations to loads from ELMs and the beryllium-clad
protection of the ITER first wall has been upgraded to a higher capability
(4.7 MWm-2 instead of 2 MWm-2) to cope with them.
The final design review of ITER vacuum vessel protection took place in
April 2013 (http://www.iter.org/newsline/264/1556).
(2) The detailed design of the radio-frequency antennas for plasma
heating on ITER: these must be positioned close to the plasma to be
effective and therefore need to be protected to avoid damage by the
erupting filaments of hot plasma. As well as the risk of damage, the
effectiveness of the RF antennas for heating the plasma is influenced by
the localised plasma density structures associated with ELMs. For example,
the number of straps on ITER's antennas is designed based on the spatial
structure of the filaments as predicted by the original
"peeling-ballooning" theory for ELMs proposed by Professor Wilson and
quantified for ITER through research of the team of scientists of the ITPA
group chaired by him. The preliminary design review of the ICRH antenna,
costing around €24M, took place in May 2012 (http://www.iter.org/newsline/225/1193)
and the final design review will take place in 2015.
3) ELM control schemes in ITER: In addition to large power fluxes on the
ITER first wall it is predicted that the large transient ELM heat loads
will rapidly erode the tungsten in the exhaust region of ITER, and
therefore ELMs will need to be controlled. Our theory, confirmed through
experiments coordinated by the ITPA PEP group, predicts that ELMs occur
when the pressure gradient at the edge of the plasma exceeds a threshold.
This led scientists at General Atomics (US) and CEA (France) to develop a
control system using an arrangement of coils around the plasma to degrade
the confinement, and relax the pressure gradient to switch off the ELMs.
This remains an active area of research around the world, but the
technique appears to work and a ~€100M ELM control coil system is now
being integrated into the ITER design whose final design review will take
place in December 2013. Although we have only played a small role in the
design of the control system, it is motivated by our theoretical
understanding of the mechanism that drives the plasma eruption.
The research leading to this impact is now international, involving many
scientists around the world. It was, however, initiated by our theoretical
model for ELMs and the eruption of hot plasma filaments, and fed into the
ITER design through the ITPA PEP group chaired by York through Prof Wilson
during 2007-2011. Concerning the theoretical development, Professor Wilson
led this research since 1998 while he was at Culham Centre for Fusion
Energy and then York (since 2005). A new computational code, ELITE, was
used to understand the ELM trigger and, although initiated by Professor
Wilson, benefitted from a strong collaboration with General Atomics (US);
that collaboration continues to this day (the research of the 4-man
GA-York team has been recognised by a prestigious 2013 American Physical
Society award, see above). The nonlinear theory was initiated just before
Professor Wilson's move to York, working in collaboration with Professor
Steve Cowley, then of Imperial College. However, at that time there was
some doubt about the relevance of the theory. Research continued at York
(and also stimulated related research around the world) to further advance
the theory and test it against experiments. Research at York includes
deriving the direction of the eruptions, and the development of a new
nonlinear MHD high performance computer code to simulate ELMs, BOUT++. Led
by Dr Dudson at York, the BOUT++ project benefits from close collaboration
with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (US).
Sources to corroborate the impact
Corroborating letter from Plasma Confinement and Modelling Section
Leader, ITER Organisation