rwm realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices 14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010 #1/26 RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices Fabio Villone Ass. EURATOM/ENEA/CREATE, DAEIMI, Università di Cassino, Italy With contributions of: Yueqiang Liu, CCFE T. Bolzonella, G. Marchiori, R. Paccagnella, A. Soppelsa & RFX-mod team R. Albanese, G. Ambrosino, M. Furno Palumbo, A. Pironti, G. Rubinacci, S. Ventre & CREATE team

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RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices. Fabio Villone. Ass. EURATOM/ENEA/CREATE, DAEIMI, Università di Cassino, Italy. With contributions of: Yueqiang Liu, CCFE T. Bolzonella, G. Marchiori, R. Paccagnella, A. Soppelsa & RFX-mod team - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#1/26

RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design

in fusion devicesFabio Villone

Ass. EURATOM/ENEA/CREATE, DAEIMI, Università di Cassino, Italy

With contributions of:

Yueqiang Liu, CCFET. Bolzonella, G. Marchiori, R. Paccagnella, A. Soppelsa & RFX-mod

teamR. Albanese, G. Ambrosino, M. Furno Palumbo, A. Pironti,

G. Rubinacci, S. Ventre & CREATE team

Page 2: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#2/26

Outline• Introduction

• The CarMa code

• Examples of applications

• Conclusions and perspectives

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#3/26

What are RWM?• Linearized ideal MHD equations can

describe fusion plasmas in some situations– In some cases predict unstable modes on

Alfvénic time scale (microseconds for typical parameters)

– External kink is one of the most dangerous (e.g. setting beta limits in tokamaks)

– A sufficiently close perfectly conducting wall may stabilize such mode thanks to image currents induced by perturbations

– Due to finite wall resistivity, image currents decay (Resistive Wall Modes) the mode is still unstable but on eddy currents time scale (typically milliseconds or slower)

– Feedback active control becomes feasible

Introduction

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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How do we analyse RWM?

Introduction

• Solution of a coupled problem is needed in principle– Plasma evolution can be described by MHD

equations– Eddy currents equations need magneto-quasi-

static electromagnetic solvers– Usual stability codes (MARS-F, KINX, ETAW,

etc): MHD solver + a simplified treatment of wall (e.g. thin shell approximation, axisymmetric or cylindrical assumptions, single wall, etc.)

– Our approach: coupling of a MHD solver (MARS-F, MARS-K) to describe plasma with a 3D eddy currents formulation (CARIDDI) to describe the wall CarMa code

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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RWM realistic modelling

Introduction

• In ITER RWMs will set stringent limits to the plasma performance (beta limit) modelling is needed to make predictions

• RWM realistic modelling: allowing a reliable extrapolation to future devices (ITER, JT60-SA)– Including all significant features of the system– Able to predict experimental evidence on existing devices

• Significant features: physics and engineering side– Inclusion of plasma flow and damping– Detailed description of conducting structures

(passive and active)– Thorough representation of control chain

(Marchiori’s presentation on Monday)

• The CarMa code is able to pursue all this

Page 6: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#6/26

Plasma flow and damping

Introduction

• Experiments can go above the beta threshold predicted by ideal MHD [Strait PRL 74(1995)]– This effect has been usually attributed to non-

negligible plasma flow – It has been suggested that kinetic damping can act

as “energy sink” and help to stabilize the mode– Different physical models of damping have been

proposed, each with distinct range of influence:• Alfven continuum [Bondeson PRL 72(1994), Zheng PRL 95(2005)]• sound wave [Betti PRL 74 (1995), Bondeson, PRL 72 (1994)],• drift kinetic damping [Bondeson PoP 3 (1996), Hu PRL 93 (2004)]

– Work is still in progress in understanding the RWM damping physics in ITER [Liu NF 49 (2009)]

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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Conducting structures

Introduction

• 3D features of conducting structures may give conflicting contributions to passive stabilization– Ports, holes, cuts are detrimental (faster growth rate)– Blanket modules are beneficial (slower growth rate)

• On active stabilization different considerations apply– Shielding effects that help passive stabilization make

active stabilization more difficult!– Active coils have a inherently 3D geometry and complex

feeding schemes– Nonlinearities (e.g. saturations) may have an important

effect

• Detailed models computationally very demanding– Fast/parallel techniques often needed

Page 8: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#8/26

The CarMa code

Page 9: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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• The plasma/wall interaction is decoupled via a suitable surface S in between– Inside S, MHD-kinetic equations– Outside S, eddy currents equations – On S suitable matching conditions

• Theoretically sound approach– Independent theoretical validation on general geometry

[Pustovitov, PPCF and PoP]– Analytical proof of the coupling scheme available in the

cylindrical limit [Liu, PoP 15 (2008)]– Many successful benchmarks in various limits and

situations (MARS-F, ETAW, KINX, STARWALL, VALEN, …)– No fitting parameters, no tuning: true predictions

The CarMa approach

The CarMa code

plasma

S Resistive wall

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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3D wall description /1• Integral formulation assuming J as

unknown– Well suited for fusion devices (only the

conducting domain Vc must be meshed)– Volumetric conductors of arbitrary shape taken

into account with a finite elements mesh (no thin shell approximation nor other simplifications)

– State-of-the-art fast methods and parallel computing techniques

– Anisotropic resistivity tensor (“equivalent” anisotropic materials to account for holes, slits,…)

– Inclusion of externally fed electrodes– Automatic treatment of complex topologies

The CarMa code

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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3D wall description /2

The CarMa code

• Some technicalities– Electric vector potential J = T solenoidality of J – Non-standard two-component gauge (numerically

convenient)– Tree-cotree decomposition of the mesh minimum

number of discrete unknonws I– Edge elements Nk right continuity conditions on J– Both frequency- and time-domain simulations

c cV V

ji dVdVjiL ''

)'()(

4),( 0

rr

rNrN

cV

ji dVjiR NN ),(

cV

i dViU 00

4AN

Vdt

dUIR

dt

dIL

3D currentsFlux induced by plasmaExternal voltages

Page 12: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#12/26

))(()(

)(

0

)()()()(

])([||

])(2[

)(

)()(

kinetickinetic||

2

,||||

2

2

bbIξbbξIp

vv

jb

jQBvQ

bbVξbvv

vvZ

QJBjpv

ξvξ

0ith

ppp

pppin

Rin

k

R

in

Rin

MARS-K

[Liu, PoP 15 (2008)]

•Shear toroidal rotation

•Parallel sound wave damping

•Kinetic inclusion

Linearized MHD

The CarMa code

• Self-consistency (non-perturbative)• Kinetic integration in full toroidal geometry • Kinetic effects due to particle bounce resonance and precession

drift resonance, both transit and trapped particles, both ions and electrons (where appropriate)

• Bulk thermal particle resonances (Maxwellian distribution)

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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Two different approaches• “Backward” coupling [Liu PoP 15 (2008)]

– Eddy currents equations are “condensed” inside MHD– Advantages:

• The 3D structure dynamics is exactly taken into account• In principle “readily” applicable to nonlinear MHD

• “Forward” coupling– MHD equations are “condensed” inside eddy currents– Advantages:

• Easy multimodal modelling (multiple n ’s)• Possibility of accounting for control non-idealities

(saturations…)

• Both can be useful (complementarity)

The CarMa code

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#14/26

Forward coupling

The CarMa code

• The plasma response to a given magnetic flux density perturbation on S is computed as a plasma response matrix, solving MHD equations inside S.

plasma

S

Resistive wall

S

Resistive wall

S

Resistive wall

• Using such plasma response matrix, the effect of 3D structures on plasma is evaluated by computing the magnetic flux density on S due to 3D currents.

• The currents induced in the 3D structures by plasma are computed via an equivalent surface current distribution on S providing the same magnetic field as plasma outside S.

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#15/26

QSLL*

Overall model

The CarMa code

VFUI

LIR dt

d

dt

d

eqIMU

Mutual inductance matrix between 3D structures and equivalent surface currents

Induced voltage on 3D structures

Equivalent surface currents providing the same magnetic

field as plasma

IQBKI 1Eneq

Matrix expressing the effect of 3D current density on plasma

VFIRI

L* dt

d

VBIAI

dt

d

Modified inductance matrix

Dynamical matrix

N h matrix h N matrix

h << N

h DoF of magnetic field on S

N DoF of current in 3D structure

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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Several possible uses…

The CarMa code

• Growth rate calculation – Unstable eigenvalue of the dynamical matrix– Standard routines (e.g. Matlab) or ad hoc computations– Beta limit with 3D structures (when the system gets

fictitiously stable)

• Controller design– state-space model (although with large dimensions and

with many unstable modes): Matlab, Simulink, …

• Time domain simulations – Controller validation– Inclusion of non-ideal power supplies (voltage/current

limitations, time delays, etc.)

Page 17: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#17/26

Examples of application

Page 18: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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Plasma flow and damping /1

Examples of application

•Benchmark case: circular tokamak•3D wall cases: holes in the conducting structures•Drift kinetic damping

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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Plasma flow and damping /2• Realistic analysis:

– 3D wall, feedback, plasma flow, sound wave damping

Examples of application

Nyquist diagram of the plasma response transfer function showing the synergistic effect of rotational stabilization with active feedback also in presence of 3D wall[Liu & Villone, PPCF 2009]

Page 20: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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ITER results /1

Examples of application

State-of-the-art fast and parallel techniques allow CarMa to study RWM including a realistic description of ITER passive structure, including thick blanket modules (mesh spans 360°)

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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ITER results /2

Examples of application

In terms of passive stability analysis, the detrimental effect of ports is compensated by the favourable stabilizing effect of blanket modules. For active stabilization, the presence of blanket modules is not beneficial (shielding effect of the magnetic field produced by active coils).The overall effect is not obvious work in progress

Holes are pessimistic - port extensions allow the current to "bypass" the hole along aconducting path

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#22/26

Examples of application

ITER results /3Realistic description of • active coils (in-vessel and ex-vessel) • measurement system (position, orietation)

• feeding system (saturations) in view of a ITER RWM feedback controller design and simulation

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#23/26

Examples of application

RFX-mod results /1• Realistic modelling of feedback control loop

thanks to favourable model properties (state-space representation)

CarMa model

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

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Examples of application

RFX-mod results /2• A fundamental goal is being attained: successful

prediction of experimental behaviour on an existing device (RFX-mod: leading edge device for MHD control)

Other results in Marchiori’s presentation on Monday

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F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#25/26

Conclusions

Page 26: RWM realistic modelling  for feedback control design  in fusion devices

F. Villone, RWM realistic modelling for feedback control design in fusion devices

14th IEA Workshop on RFP Research, Padova, 26-28 April 2010

#26/26

Conclusions• The CarMa model is able of realistic RWM modelling

providing confidence in making extrapolations – Inclusion of various damping models (kinetic, sound wave,…)– Extremely detailed geometrical representation (volumetric

blanket modules, port extensions, active coils, …) (thanks to state-of-the-art fast/parallel techniques)

– Easy inclusion in complicated control loops– Reproduction of experimental results

• Many developments are expected in the near future– Application to ITER of various damping models– RWM feedback controller for latest ITER configurations– Further applications and experiments on RFX-mod– Applications to JET and JT60-SA are ongoing

Thank you for your attention

[email protected]