Abstract

Tokamak start-up is strongly dependent on the state of the initial plasma formed during plasma breakdown. We have investigated through numerical simulations the effects that the pre-filling pressure and induced electric field have on pure ohmic heating during the breakdown process. Three breakdown modes during the discharge are found, as a function of different initial parameters: no breakdown mode, successful breakdown mode and runaway mode. No breakdown mode often occurs with low electric field or high pre-filling pressure, while runaway electrons are usually easy to generate at high electric field or low pre-filling pressure (${<}1.33\times 10^{-4}$ Pa). The plasma behaviours and the physical mechanisms under the three breakdown modes are discussed. We have identified the electric field and pressure values at which the different modes occur. In particular, when the electric field is $0.3~\text{V}~\text{m}^{-1}$ (the value at which ITER operates), the pressure range for possible breakdown becomes narrow, which is consistent with Lloyd’s theoretical prediction. In addition, for $0.3~\text{V}~\text{m}^{-1}$, the optimal pre-filling pressure range obtained from our simulations is $1.33\times 10^{-3}\sim 2.66\times 10^{-3}$ Pa, in good agreement with ITER’s design. Besides, we also find that the Townsend discharge model does not appropriately describe the plasma behaviour during tokamak breakdown due to the presence of a toroidal field. Furthermore, we suggest three possible operation mechanisms for general start-up scenarios which could better control the breakdown phase.

Highlights

  • Tokamak breakdown is the first process in tokamak start-up, during which the neutral gas is ionized to form plasma

  • Following Lloyd’s work, we have performed a thorough scan of the parameters and we show in figure 11 when no-breakdown, successful breakdown(red circles) and runaway are obtained as a function of the induced electric field and pre-filling pressure

  • No-breakdown mode tends to occur in the cases with low electric field or high pre-filling pressure

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Summary

Introduction

Tokamak breakdown is the first process in tokamak start-up, during which the neutral gas is ionized to form plasma. The formation of tokamak plasma is a complicated process As it is well known, the successful start-up process is mainly decided by the applied electric field and pre-filling gas pressure (Lloyd et al 1991; Chattopadhyay et al 1996; Song et al 2014). Lloyd’s work mostly centres on the operational parameters, such as the induced electric field, pre-filling gas pressure, the error magnetic field, which are critical factors for tokamak start-up. We believe that the study on tokamak start-up should be pursued more thoroughly This will greatly help to save the expenditure of volt-second consumption for later burn through and current ramping up phases by decreasing the induced electric field, but will help to decrease the cost in relation to engineering issues, such as relaxing the requirement on the poloidal coils power supply system.

Simulation results
Influence of the pre-filling pressure
No-breakdown mode
Successful breakdown mode
Runaway mode
Mechanism of different breakdown modes
Electric field and pressure limits
Comparison with Townsend theory
Conclusions

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