Abstract

Injecting shattered pellets is the critical concept of the envisaged ITER disruption mitigation system (DMS). Rapid deposition of large amounts of material should presumably result in controlled cooling of the entire plasma. A considerable transfer of thermal energy from the electrons of the background plasma to the ions accompanies a localized material injection due to the ambipolar expansion along the magnetic field line of the cold and dense plasmoid produced by the ablated pellet. Radiation initially plays the dominant role in the energy balance of a composite plasmoid containing high-Z impurities. A competition between the ambipolar expansion and the radiative losses defines the Thermal Quench scenario, including the amount of pre-quench thermal energy radiated on a short collisional timescale—possibly detrimental for the plasma-facing components. The present work quantifies plasmoid energy balance for disruption mitigation parameters. For pure hydrogen injection, up to 90% of the pre-pellet electron thermal energy may go to the newly injected ions. We also demonstrate that a moderate high-Z impurity content within the plasmoid can reduce highly localized radiation at the beginning of the expansion. The thermal energy will then dissipate on the much longer ion collisional timescale, which would be attractive for ITER DMS.

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