Kinetic simulation of electron cyclotron resonance assisted gas breakdown in split-biased waveguides for ITER collective Thomson scattering diagnostic
Jan Trieschmann, Axel Wright Larsen, Thomas Mussenbrock, S{\o}ren Bang, Korsholm

TL;DR
This study uses kinetic Monte Carlo simulations to analyze electron cyclotron resonance gas breakdown in split-biased waveguides for ITER diagnostics, demonstrating mitigation strategies for safe operation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based assessment of ECR gas breakdown mitigation in ITER's waveguide system using a split-biased design.
Findings
ECR breakdown occurs at 0.3 Pa hydrogen pressure without mitigation.
A 1 kV bias effectively mitigates breakdown up to 10 Pa.
Simulation results align with theoretical predictions and address design limitations.
Abstract
For the measurement of the dynamics of fusion-born alpha particles MeV in ITER using collective Thomson scattering (CTS), safe transmission of a gyrotron beam at mm-wavelength (1 MW, 60 GHz) passing the electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) in the in-vessel tokamak `port plug' vacuum is a prerequisite. Depending on neutral gas pressure and composition, ECR-assisted gas breakdown may occur at the location of the resonance, which must be mitigated for diagnostic performance and safety reasons. The concept of a split electrically biased waveguide (SBWG) has been previously demonstrated in [C.P. Moeller, U.S. Patent 4,687,616 (1987)]. The waveguide is longitudinally split and a kV bias voltage applied between the two halves. Electrons are rapidly removed from the central region of high radio frequency electric field strength, mitigating breakdown. As a full scale…
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