Are you an EPFL student looking for a semester project?
Work with us on data science and visualisation projects, and deploy your project as an app on top of Graph Search.
Plasma-molecular interactions generate molecular ions which react with the plasma and contribute to detachment through molecular activated recombination (MAR), reducing the ion target flux, and molecular activated dissociation (MAD), both of which create excited atoms. Hydrogenic emission from these atoms has been detected experimentally in detached TCV, JET and MAST-U deuterium plasmas. The TCV findings, however, were in disagreement with SOLPS-ITER simulations for deuterium, indicating a molecular ion density (D-2(+)) that was insufficient to lead to significant hydrogenic emission, which was attributed to underestimates of the molecular charge exchange rate (D-2 + D+ -> D-2(+) + D) for deuterium (obtained by rescaling the hydrogen rates by their isotope mass). In this work, we have performed new SOLPS-ITER simulations with the default rate setup and a modified rate setup where ion isotope mass rescaling was disabled. This increased the D-2(+) content by >x100. By disabling ion isotope mass rescaling: (1) the total ion sinks are more than doubled due to the inclusion of MAR; (2) the additional MAR causes the ion target flux to roll-over during detachment; (3) the total Da emission in the divertor increases during deep detachment by roughly a factor of four; (4) the neutral atom density in the divertor is doubled due to MAD, leading to a 50% increase in neutral pressure; (5) total hydrogenic power loss is increased by up to 60% due to MAD. These differences result in an improved agreement between the experiment and the simulations in terms of spectroscopic measurements, ion source/sink inferences and the occurrence of an ion target flux roll-over. Extrapolating simplified scalings of divertor molecular densities (TCV & MAST-U) to reactor-relevant densities suggests the underestimation of molecular charge exchange could strongly impact divertor physics (neutral atom density, ions sinks) and hydrogen emission (which has implications for detachment control) in deeply detached conditions, warranting further study.
, ,