Kinetic modelling of runaway electron avalanches in tokamak plasmas
E. Nilsson, J. Decker, Y. Peysson, R.S. Granetz, F., Saint-Laurent, M. Vlainic

TL;DR
This paper develops a kinetic model for runaway electron avalanches in tokamak plasmas, highlighting the significance of knock-on collisions and magnetic effects in RE generation, especially under low temperature and electric field conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a full 3-D kinetic description of REs including bounce-averaged knock-on source terms and assesses the avalanche mechanism's importance across different plasma parameters.
Findings
Avalanche effect significant even in non-disruptive scenarios.
RE formation reduced off the magnetic axis due to trapped electrons.
Knock-on collisions dominate RE generation at low temperature and electric field.
Abstract
Runaway electrons (REs) can be generated in tokamak plasmas if the accelerating force from the toroidal electric field exceeds the collisional drag force due to Coulomb collisions with the background plasma. In ITER, disruptions are expected to generate REs mainly through knock-on collisions, where enough momentum can be transferred from existing runaways to slow electrons to transport the latter beyond a critical momentum, setting off an avalanche of REs. Since knock-on runaways are usually scattered off with a significant perpendicular component of the momentum with respect to the local magnetic field direction, these particles are highly magnetized. Consequently, the momentum dynamics require a full 3-D kinetic description, since these electrons are highly sensitive to the magnetic non-uniformity of a toroidal configuration. A bounce-averaged knock-on source term is derived. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic confinement fusion research · Dust and Plasma Wave Phenomena · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
