Optimisation of out-vessel magnetic diagnostics for plasma boundary reconstruction in tokamaks
J. A. Romero, J. Svensson

TL;DR
This study analyzes how the placement, accuracy, and density of out-vessel magnetic sensors affect plasma boundary reconstruction in tokamaks, proposing a hybrid sensor configuration for optimal results in future reactors.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the trade-offs between sensor accuracy, density, and placement distance for plasma boundary reconstruction in tokamaks, specifically tailored to the Swiss TCV device.
Findings
Sensor accuracy and density can be traded for placement distance up to a limit.
A hybrid sensor configuration inside and outside the vessel improves boundary reconstruction.
Results suggest feasible sensor setups for future tokamak reactors like ITER.
Abstract
To improve the low frequency spectrum of magnetic field measurements of future tokamak reactors such as ITER, several steady state magnetic sensor technologies have been considered. For all the studied technologies it is always advantageous to place the sensors outside the vacuum vessel and as far away from the reactor core to minimize radiation damage and temperature effects, but not so far as to compromise the accuracy of the equilibrium reconstruction. We have studied to what extent increasing the distance between out-vessel sensors and plasma can be compensated for sensor accuracy and/or density before the limit imposed by the degeneracy of the problem is reached. The study is particularized for the Swiss TCV tokamak, due to the quality of its magnetic data and its ability to operate with a wide range of plasma shapes and divertor configurations. We have scanned the plasma boundary…
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