Heat flux width: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 06:24, 28 March 2023
The Scrape-Off Layer (SOL) heat flux width is the length scale of the decaying exponential heat flux profile on the open flux surfaces. Here, there is a competition between heat transport parallel to the field, which conducts heat to the divertors, and perpendicular diffusion. Since parallel conduction is much faster than perpendicular diffusion, heat flux widths () are fairly narrow—usually a few mm to a cm. is assumed to be set at or near the outboard midplane,[1] which is where the dominant heat source from the core into the SOL is located. So when is quoted, it should be understood that the value at the outboard midplane is given unless otherwise stated.
As heat flows through the SOL to the divertor, the profile is broadened by magnetic flux expansion. After passing the X-point, perpendicular diffusion can go in both directions; outboard and deeper into the SOL as before, and inward to the private flux region (PFR).[2] This has the effect of smoothing the profile.
The heat flux profile at the divertor (neglecting dissipation in the SOL, such as in the case of detachment) is then[1]
where , is distance along the divertor plate, is the magnetic strike point position, is the width of the Gaussian blur effect that is convoluted with the exponential profile, is the flux expansion (distance between flux surfaces at the divertor / distance between the same surfaces at the midplane), and is a background heat flux (which could come from radiated heat, for example). An equation for the heat flux at the divertor is useful because the divertor heat flux profile can be measured by infrared thermography, Langmuir probes, or surface thermocouples.
This functional form was fit to heat flux profiles from several devices, and the resulting values were regressed versus several important parameters, such as field, power, safety factor, and device size.[3] The regression analysis had several variants with different subsets of available devices and different parameters. An example is
with a fit to JET, DIII-D, and ASDEX Upgrade resulting in
mm, , , , ,
where is the toroidal magnetic field, is the cylindrical safety factor, is the power flowing into the SOL, and is the geometric major radius of the plasma.
There have been other regression fits by different researchers using different subsets of devices and different parameters.[4]