ITER is an international research project to build an experimental fusion reactor. The success of ITER would mark an important step towards creating a sustainable carbon-free source of fusion energy. A major goal of ITER is to demonstrate the generation of 500 MW of fusion power from a 50 MW input. One of the biggest challenges for ITER will be to control the fusion plasma. Fusion reactions generate massive amounts of heat. The heat from the fusion reaction in ITER will cause the plasma inside ITER to reach temperatures as hot as the Sun, 150 million degrees Celsius. ITER will use strong magnets to contain the extremely hot plasma yet edge plasma may still interact with the surface of ITER and create a turbulent environment where edge plasma behavior is difficult to predict and control. Controlling the edge plasma behavior is necessary to create a sustained, controlled, and confined fusion process. Edge plasma behavior is therefore critical to ITER’s success.
First, ITER must be able to reliably withstand the steady exhaust heat deposited in an extremely narrow strip on the divertor target plates. Second, ITER edge plasma must be able to access physical conditions that create suitable edge plasma behavior known as the high confinement mode of operation (L-‐H transition). Here the edge plasma supports confinement by forming a barrier called the ‘edge pedestal’. Third, instabilities that periodically destroy the edge plasma pedestal must be avoided or mitigated.
To optimize the chances for ITER’s success in controlling the high energy edge plasma, this project supports computational simulations to understand edge plasma physics using highly accurate extreme-scale edge gyrokinetic code XGC1, developed for this purpose by collaborative SciDAC activities between computer and fusion scientists supported by DOE’s ASCR and FES programs.