The cavity that is formed between the ITER ICRF antenna plug and its port can exhibit resonances at specific fre-quencies, some of them in the relevant range of frequencies for IC heating. These resonances related to eigenmodes of the coaxial cavity, can substantially increase the level of electric fields inside the cavity and the level of RF losses in the B4C neutron shielding tiles at the back of the port-plug cavity can also be significant. For instance, in MWS simulations of a simplified geometry of the antenna in front of a dielectric mimicking the plasma loading, the level of RF losses in the B4C can reach tens of kW in 00ππ toroidal phasing and even larger values in monopole. RF probes will be installed to monitor the RF fields in the port plug cavity and additional simulations are required to properly assess the integration (position, orientation) and their effectiveness. A model with a very detailed geometry of the antenna was also used in Ansys HFSS and TOPICA simulations. On the one hand it is observed that the resistivity of the B4C neutron shielding material located at the back of the cavity has a marked effect on the excitation of the resonances and that for certain ranges of resistivity the numerical computation fails exhausting computer memory requirements (Ansys/HFSS) when trying to solve the total antenna and cavity problem as a single model. On the other hand lossy materials such as the B4C tiles cannot be represented in TOPICA models while a realistic plasma gyrotropic load can not be simulated in HFSS/MWS. Therefore, we introduced a modal analysis in the cavity to decouple solving the computationally intensive plasma-facing front of the launcher from the cavity. The fields computed by TOPICA for various loading conditions and frequencies are evaluated on a set of vertical planes in the cavity and expanded in a series of modal eigenmodes for a given mode of operation. This provides the necessary input for an accurate evaluation of the RF fields in the cavity in an independent model not including the antenna front-face. It will also contribute to the understanding of the impact of the relative toroidal phasing of the strap currents on the excitation of the cavity modes and to simulate accurately the response of the cavity RF probes.

Modal analysis of the fields in the ITER ICRF antenna port plug cavity / Louche, Fabrice; Durodié, Frédéric; Krivska, Alena; Helou, Walid; Milanesio, Daniele. - In: AIP CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS. - ISSN 0094-243X. - ELETTRONICO. - 2984:(2023). (Intervento presentato al convegno 24th Topical Conference on Radio-Frequency Power in Plasmas tenutosi a Annapolis, USA nel 26–28 September 2022) [10.1063/5.0162511].

Modal analysis of the fields in the ITER ICRF antenna port plug cavity

Milanesio, Daniele
2023

Abstract

The cavity that is formed between the ITER ICRF antenna plug and its port can exhibit resonances at specific fre-quencies, some of them in the relevant range of frequencies for IC heating. These resonances related to eigenmodes of the coaxial cavity, can substantially increase the level of electric fields inside the cavity and the level of RF losses in the B4C neutron shielding tiles at the back of the port-plug cavity can also be significant. For instance, in MWS simulations of a simplified geometry of the antenna in front of a dielectric mimicking the plasma loading, the level of RF losses in the B4C can reach tens of kW in 00ππ toroidal phasing and even larger values in monopole. RF probes will be installed to monitor the RF fields in the port plug cavity and additional simulations are required to properly assess the integration (position, orientation) and their effectiveness. A model with a very detailed geometry of the antenna was also used in Ansys HFSS and TOPICA simulations. On the one hand it is observed that the resistivity of the B4C neutron shielding material located at the back of the cavity has a marked effect on the excitation of the resonances and that for certain ranges of resistivity the numerical computation fails exhausting computer memory requirements (Ansys/HFSS) when trying to solve the total antenna and cavity problem as a single model. On the other hand lossy materials such as the B4C tiles cannot be represented in TOPICA models while a realistic plasma gyrotropic load can not be simulated in HFSS/MWS. Therefore, we introduced a modal analysis in the cavity to decouple solving the computationally intensive plasma-facing front of the launcher from the cavity. The fields computed by TOPICA for various loading conditions and frequencies are evaluated on a set of vertical planes in the cavity and expanded in a series of modal eigenmodes for a given mode of operation. This provides the necessary input for an accurate evaluation of the RF fields in the cavity in an independent model not including the antenna front-face. It will also contribute to the understanding of the impact of the relative toroidal phasing of the strap currents on the excitation of the cavity modes and to simulate accurately the response of the cavity RF probes.
2023
978-0-7354-4604-5
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2981967