JOURNAL ARTICLE

Adapting computational optimization concepts from aeronautics to nuclear fusion reactor design

W. DekeyserD. ReiterMartine Baelmans

Year: 2012 Journal:   EPJ Web of Conferences Vol: 33 Pages: 03009-03009   Publisher: EDP Sciences

Abstract

Even on the most powerful supercomputers available today, computational nuclear fusion reactor divertor design is extremely CPU demanding, not least due to the large number of design variables and the hybrid micro-macro character of the flows. Therefore, automated design methods based on optimization can greatly assist current reactor design studies. Over the past decades, “adjoint methods” for shape optimization have proven their virtue in the field of aerodynamics. Applications include drag reduction for wing and wing-body configurations. Here we demonstrate that also for divertor design, these optimization methods have a large potential. Specifically, we apply the continuous adjoint method to the optimization of the divertor geometry in a 2D poloidal cross section of an axisymmetric tokamak device (as, e.g., JET and ITER), using a simplified model for the plasma edge. The design objective is to spread the target material heat load as much as possible by controlling the shape of the divertor, while maintaining the full helium ash removal capabilities of the vacuum pumping system.\n

Keywords:
Divertor Tokamak Aerodynamics Fusion power Aerospace engineering Nuclear engineering Computer science Computational fluid dynamics Shape optimization Drag Mechanical engineering Physics Engineering Plasma Nuclear physics Structural engineering Finite element method

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0.80
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Citation History

Topics

Nuclear reactor physics and engineering
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Aerospace Engineering
Fusion materials and technologies
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Magnetic confinement fusion research
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Nuclear and High Energy Physics
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