MANTA: A Negative-Triangularity NASEM-Compliant Fusion Pilot Plant
MANTA Collaboration, G. Rutherford, H. S. Wilson, A. Saltzman, D., Arnold, J. L. Ball, S. Benjamin, R. Bielajew, N. de Boucaud, M., Calvo-Carrera, R. Chandra, H. Choudhury, C. Cummings, L. Corsaro, N. DaSilva,, R. Diab, A. R. Devitre, S. Ferry, S. J. Frank, C. J. Hansen

TL;DR
The MANTA design proposes a compact, negative-triangularity tokamak fusion pilot plant that exceeds key performance and safety requirements, with promising economic viability and self-sufficient tritium breeding.
Contribution
It introduces a novel NT-based fusion plant design that meets US FPP standards, with integrated modeling predicting high performance, safety, and economic feasibility.
Findings
Predicts 450 MW fusion power with high plasma gain.
Achieves low peak heat flux of 2.8 MW/m² through impurity seeding.
Projects net electricity generation of 90 MW with an economic cost under US$5 billion.
Abstract
The MANTA (Modular Adjustable Negative Triangularity ARC-class) design study investigated how negative-triangularity (NT) may be leveraged in a compact, fusion pilot plant (FPP) to take a ``power-handling first" approach. The result is a pulsed, radiative, ELM-free tokamak that satisfies and exceeds the FPP requirements described in the 2021 National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report ``Bringing Fusion to the U.S. Grid". A self-consistent integrated modeling workflow predicts a fusion power of 450 MW and a plasma gain of 11.5 with only 23.5 MW of power to the scrape-off layer (SOL). This low together with impurity seeding and high density at the separatrix results in a peak heat flux of just 2.8 MW/m. MANTA's high aspect ratio provides space for a large central solenoid (CS), resulting in 15 minute inductive pulses. In spite of the high…
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Taxonomy
TopicsModular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
