Exploring the fusion power plant design space: comparative analysis of positive and negative triangularity tokamaks through optimization
T. Slendebroek, A. O. Nelson, O. M. Meneghini, G. Dose, A. G. Ghiozzi, J. Harvey, B. C. Lyons, J. McClenaghan, T. F. Neiser, D. B. Weisberg, M. G. Yoo, E. Bursch, C. Holland

TL;DR
This study systematically compares positive and negative triangularity tokamaks using multi-objective optimization, revealing their distinct design trade-offs, operational constraints, and potential for fusion power plant applications.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive optimization framework to evaluate PT and NT tokamaks, highlighting their differing design philosophies and sensitivities to operational uncertainties.
Findings
Both configurations achieve similar cost-performance trade-offs.
PT is resilient to pedestal degradation but constrained to larger, lower-field machines.
NT can access compact, high-field designs leveraging HTS technology.
Abstract
The optimal configuration choice between positive triangularity (PT) and negative triangularity (NT) tokamaks for fusion power plants hinges on navigating different operational constraints rather than achieving specific plasma performance metrics. This study presents a systematic comparison using constrained multi-objective optimization with the integrated FUsion Synthesis Engine (FUSE) framework. Over 200,000 integrated design evaluations were performed exploring the trade-offs between capital cost minimization and operational reliability (maximizing ) while satisfying engineering constraints including 250 50 MW net electric power, tritium breeding ratio 1.1, power exhaust limits and an hour flattop time. Both configurations achieve similar cost-performance Pareto fronts through contrasting design philosophies. PT, while demonstrating resilience to pedestal degradation…
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