Expanded capabilities of the CarMa code in modeling resistive wall mode dynamics with 3-D conductors

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Abstract

In this work, an improved version of the CarMa code is presented, called CarMa-D, for the analysis of resistive wall modes (RWMs) in fusion devices, simultaneously considering the effects of volumetric three-dimensional conducting structures, plasma dynamics, toroidal rotation or drift-kinetic damping. Unlike static CarMa, CarMa-D does not rely on the simplifying assumptions such as neglecting the plasma mass, toroidal rotation and kinetic damping. The new coupling strategy is based on matrix-based Padé rational functions approximation of plasma a response. The arising mathematical model is formally equivalent to the original CarMa model, but with a higher number of degrees of freedom to model the dynamics of the plasma. CarMa-D overcomes the main limitations of the original CarMa, in particular: (i) the massless assumption for the plasma is removed, allowing modeling of global modes growing both on ideal kink time scales and in the typical RWM growth rate regime, with a suitable treatment of the model; (ii) the effects of toroidal plasma flow and drift kinetic damping can be included into the new model, providing a powerful tool to study macroscopic phenomena where both plasma dynamics and 3-D conducting structures play important roles.

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Bonotto, M., Liu, Y. Q., Villone, F., Pigatto, L., & Bettini, P. (2020). Expanded capabilities of the CarMa code in modeling resistive wall mode dynamics with 3-D conductors. In Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion (Vol. 62). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6587/ab74e7

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