Abstract

The KInetic code for Plasma Periphery (KIPP) models the parallel (along magnetic field lines) propagation of charged particles in the scrape-off layer (SOL) and divertor of tokamaks. An iterative coupling between KIPP and a 2D edge fluid code, EDGE2D, which in turn is coupled to the Monte Carlo solver for neutrals, EIRENE, was used to achieve a converged KIPP-EDGE2D-EIRENE solution. In the iterative coupling algorithm, KIPP transfers kinetic parallel electron and ion heat conductivities to EDGE2D, whereas EDGE2D returns to KIPP 2D distributions of macroscopic plasma parameters across the computations grid. The initial EDGE2D-EIRENE solution simulated the SOL and divertor plasma of the ITER inter-edge localized mode (ELM) baseline scenario. This work employs the same methodology as an earlier study based on the analysis of JET high radiative H-mode conditions, with strong nitrogen injection leading to partial detachment at divertor targets (Chankin et al 2022 Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 64 095007). The results are qualitatively similar to those of the JET study in demonstrating the strong heat flux limiting effect, together with the rise in electron and ion temperatures in the main SOL. At the same time, the kinetic effects of the parallel propagation of charged particles are not expected to drastically change the target power deposition at divertor targets calculated by EDGE2D-EIRENE alone.

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