Numerical study of RF power coupling in fusion-relevant single- and multi-driver H$^-$ ion sources
Dominikus Zielke, Stefan Briefi, Ursel Fantz

TL;DR
This study uses a 2D fluid model to analyze RF power coupling efficiency in fusion-relevant H$^-$ ion sources, revealing how multi-driver configurations and shielding affect power transfer and plasma parameters.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based explanation for reduced RF power transfer efficiency in multi-driver ion sources, considering magnetic field distribution and shielding effects.
Findings
Multi-driver sources show similar plasma distributions to single-driver sources.
Shielding impacts RF field distribution and efficiency.
Model results agree with experimental measurements of efficiency decrease.
Abstract
ITER's large and powerful neutral beam injection system is based on an ion source utilizing a modular concept, where eight cylindrical drivers are attached to one common expansion and extraction region. In each driver, a plasma is sustained via inductive coupling with powers of up to 100 kW at a driving radio frequency (RF) of 1 MHz to produce fusion-relevant hydrogen beams. These high powers impose great stress on the electric system. Recent measurements at the single-driver test bed BATMAN Upgrade showed that the RF power transfer efficiency , which measures the ratio of power absorbed by plasma to total RF power, is only around 0.5, leaving room for optimization. In multi-driver test beds such as ELISE with four drivers is found to be even further decreased to around 0.4. To explain this difference, a previously validated self-consistent 2D RF power coupling fluid model…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle accelerators and beam dynamics · Magnetic confinement fusion research · Superconducting Materials and Applications
