Targeting realistic geometry in Tokamak code Gysela
In magnetically confined plasmas used in Tokamak, turbulence is responsible for specific transport that limits the performance of this kind of reactors. Gyrokinetic simulations are able to capture ion and electron turbulence that give rise to heat losses, but require also state-of-the-art HPC techni...
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Zusammenfassung: | In magnetically confined plasmas used in Tokamak, turbulence is responsible
for specific transport that limits the performance of this kind of reactors.
Gyrokinetic simulations are able to capture ion and electron turbulence that
give rise to heat losses, but require also state-of-the-art HPC techniques to
handle computation costs. Such simulations are a major tool to establish good
operating regime in Tokamak such as ITER, which is currently being built. Some
of the key issues to address more realistic gyrokinetic simulations are:
efficient and robust numerical schemes, accurate geometric description, good
parallelization algorithms. The framework of this work is the Semi-Lagrangian
setting for solving the gyrokinetic Vlasov equation and the Gyseka code. In
this paper, a new variant for the interpolation method is proposed that can
handle the mesh singularity in the poloidal plane at r=0 (polar system is used
for the moment in Gysela). A non-uniform meshing of the poloidal plane is
proposed instead of uniform one in order to save memory and computations. The
interpolation method, the gyroaverage operator, and the Poisson solver are
revised in order to cope with non-uniform meshes. A mapping that establish a
bijection from polar coordinates to more realistic plasma shape is used to
improve realism. Convergence studies are provided to establish the validity and
robustness of our new approach. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1712.02201 |