Ab initio Simulation der Plasma-Wand-Kontaktzone : Entwicklung und Bewertung gitterfreier Algorithmen
- Ab initio simulation of the plasma wall interaction zone : development and evaluation of grid free algorithms
Salmagne, Christian; Kull, Hans-Jörg (Thesis advisor); Reiter, Detlev (Thesis advisor)
Aachen (2016)
Dissertation / PhD Thesis
Dissertation, RWTH Aachen University, 2016
Abstract
The plasma edge region has a significant influence on the magnetic confinement in fusion plasmas, which in turn determines the efficiency of a possible future fusion reactor. Thus, the processes taking place in this region have to be understood in detail to be able to accurately control the edge region. A numerical way to gain deeper insights into the complex processes within the plasma sheath region is the ab intio kinetic particle simulation. The kinetic description is capable of resolving even the smallest scales of interest in time and space. The Particle-in-Cell scheme is a grid based representative of this class of simulations. It has been used for simulations of the plasma sheath for a considerable time. Within this work, another concept of kinetic particle simulations is used - the Barnes-Hut Tree Code. This method has been successfully used for simulations of laser plasmas as well as for simulations of galaxy formation before. Due to intrinsic properties of this method, it should be well suited for treating typical plasmas in the plasma wall interaction region. However, contradictions to analytical as well as numerical results were found in previous attempts to simulate the edge region with a Tree Code. These contradictions had not been resolved so far. In the present work the massively parallel Barnes-Hut Tree Code PEPC is used to develop and evaluate a numerical model of the plasma wall interaction region. The discrepancies have been understood and completely dispelled. An artificially increased collisionality within the simulation plasma and numerical heating of the electrons were identified as the cause aforementioned contradictions. For the first time, these effects have been measured and parametrized by plasma density, plasma temperature and several numerical input parameters in a wide parameter range. Using the obtained results, the electron and ion kinetics within the plasma sheath region have been self-consistently modeled from first principles as a proof of concept.Given this proof of concept, we developed a guideline that helps to evaluate, if a given plasma edge problem can be tackled with the grid free particle simulation. This guideline is based upon two criteria. First, the aforementioned parametrization of the collision and heating times in a simulation plasma as well as additional stability criteria are used to exclude numerical parameters that lead to incorrect results. Second, considerations regarding the runtime of the massively parallel simulations are used to define a maximum system size and simulation length. Finally, usage of the developed guideline is demonstrated by means of several relevant examples.
Institutions
- German Research School for Simulation Sciences GmbH [056500]
- Chair of Experimental Physics III B [133510]
- Theoretical Physics (condensed matter) Teaching and Research Area [135220]
- Department of Physics [130000]
Identifier
- URN: urn:nbn:de:hbz:82-rwth-2016-069013
- RWTH PUBLICATIONS: RWTH-2016-06901