Advances in Quasilinear Gyrokinetic Modeling of Turbulent Transport

Advances in Quasilinear Gyrokinetic Modeling of Turbulent Transport

Author: Cole Darin Stephens

Publisher:

Published: 2021

Total Pages: 312

ISBN-13:

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The quest to harness fusion energy requires the successful modeling of plasma turbulence and transport in magnetic confinement devices. For such modeling, the requisite length and time scales span many orders of magnitude. Integrated modeling approaches are constructed to account for the wide range of physics involved in turbulent transport by coupling separate physical models together. The primary physical models used in this work are kinetic and designed to simulate microturbulence on the smallest scales associated with turbulent transport. However, high precision nonlinear kinetic simulations often cannot be easily coupled to integrated modeling suites due to the extreme computational costs that would be involved. Model reduction which drastically reduces the computational complexity of the problem is therefore necessary. One must of course ensure that the reduced model does not severely diminish the accuracy of the calculation; the model reduction itself must be founded on more exact computational approaches as well as fundamental theoretical principles. One of the most successful approaches in model reduction is quasilinear gyrokinetics. There are two fundamental assumptions for the quasilinear model examined in this work. First, the three adiabatic invariants (the magnetic moment, the longitudinal invariant, and the poloidal flux) must be appropriately conserved and their associated single charged particle motions (the gyromotion, the bounce-transit motion, and the toroidal drift motion) must be characterized accurately. Second, the quasilinear approximation must hold such that the coherent linear response is adequate enough to compute the quasilinear fluxes without full calculation of the nonlinear physics. The particular model used, QuaLiKiz, has been proven successful in reproducing local gyrokinetic fluxes in the tokamak core while remaining computationally tractable. There are three primary goals of this dissertation project. The first is to examine the fundamental physics underlying gyrokinetic and reduced model approaches at the single charged particle scale. To achieve this goal, we examine the assumption of magnetic moment invariance in a wide variety of electromagnetic fields. We successfully identify the dimensionless parameters that determine magnetic moment conservation in each scenario and then proceed to quantify the degree to which magnetic moment conservation is broken. In doing so, we confirm that the magnetic moment is sufficiently conserved for a wide range of regimes relevant to tokamak plasmas. In addition, we derive new analytic formulas for quantities associated with bounce-transit motion in circular tokamak fields. We compare these new, more exact calculations to approximations commonly used in reduced models (including QuaLiKiz) and determine the conditions such that the approximations break down. We then also confirm that the approximations are valid in the tokamak core for conventional, large aspect ratio devices. The second goal of this dissertation project is to rederive and compile the model equations for QuaLiKiz from first principles. Over the years of QuaLiKiz's development, there has never been a complete manuscript that sketches the derivation of QuaLiKiz from start to finish. The lack of such a document makes it difficult to extend the physics of QuaLiKiz to new parameter regimes of interest. Various possible extensions such as including electromagnetic effects or more realistic tokamak geometries require the adjustment of several different assumptions that would affect the derivation in key ways. As such, correct implementations of new physics would require an existing derivation as a reference point lest the implementation be handled in an incoherent fashion. In addition, a step-by-step outline of how each assumption of QuaLiKiz affects the derivation can be helpful in determining which assumptions can be relaxed for a more accurate model. The successful completion of this derivation, included in this dissertation, will be immensely useful for future QuaLiKiz improvement and validation. With the derivation in hand, we proceed to the third goal of this project: improving the collisional model of QuaLiKiz. Collisions play an essential role in characterizing the transport associated with trapped electron modes. It has become evident in recent studies that the collisional model in QuaLiKiz requires improvement; in integrated modeling, the imprecise treatment of collisional trapped electron modes leads to incorrect density profile predictions near the tokamak core for highly collisional regimes. We revisit the collision model implemented in QuaLiKiz and use the more exact gyrokinetic code GENE (Gyrokinetic Electromagnetic Numerical Experiment) to make improvements to QuaLiKiz's collision operator. We then use the new version of QuaLiKiz in integrated modeling to compare density profiles predicted by the old and new collision operators. We confirm that the new collision operator leads to density profiles that more accurately match the experimental profiles.


Gyrokinetic Particle Simulation of Turbulent Transport in Burning Plasmas

Gyrokinetic Particle Simulation of Turbulent Transport in Burning Plasmas

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 75

ISBN-13:

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The three-year project GPS-TTBP resulted in over 152 publications and 135 presentations. This summary focuses on the scientific progress made by the project team. A major focus of the project was on the physics intrinsic rotation in tokamaks. Progress included the first ever flux driven study of net intrinsic spin-up, mediated by boundary effects (in collaboration with CPES), detailed studies of the microphysics origins of the Rice scaling, comparative studies of symmetry breaking mechanisms, a pioneering study of intrinsic torque driven by trapped electron modes, and studies of intrinsic rotation generation as a thermodynamic engine. Validation studies were performed with C-Mod, DIII-D and CSDX. This work resulted in very successful completion of the FY2010 Theory Milestone Activity for OFES, and several prominent papers of the 2008 and 2010 IAEA Conferences. A second major focus was on the relation between zonal flow formation and transport non-locality. This culminated in the discovery of the ExB staircase - a conceptually new phenomenon. This also makes useful interdisciplinary contact with the physics of the PV staircase, well-known in oceans and atmospheres. A third topic where progress was made was in the simulation and theory of turbulence spreading. This work, now well cited, is important for understanding the dynamics of non-locality in turbulent transport. Progress was made in studies of conjectured non-diffusive transport in trapped electron turbulence. Pioneering studies of ITB formation, coupling to intrinsic rotation and hysteresis were completed. These results may be especially significant for future ITER operation. All told, the physics per dollar performance of this project was quite good. The intense focus was beneficial and SciDAC resources were essential to its success.


Advances In Turbulence

Advances In Turbulence

Author: Stanley Corrsin

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 1988-10-01

Total Pages: 256

ISBN-13: 9780891167471

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Based on a symposium held in June 1986 in Minneapolis, USA, this volume surveys current information on turbulence measurement and modelling, computational fluid mechanics, vortex flow and physical modelling, cavitation and two-phase flow, bluff body flow and fluid structure interaction.


Advanced Approaches in Turbulence

Advanced Approaches in Turbulence

Author: Paul Durbin

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2021-07-24

Total Pages: 554

ISBN-13: 0128208902

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Advanced Approaches in Turbulence: Theory, Modeling, Simulation and Data Analysis for Turbulent Flows focuses on the updated theory, simulation and data analysis of turbulence dealing mainly with turbulence modeling instead of the physics of turbulence. Beginning with the basics of turbulence, the book discusses closure modeling, direct simulation, large eddy simulation and hybrid simulation. The book also covers the entire spectrum of turbulence models for both single-phase and multi-phase flows, as well as turbulence in compressible flow. Turbulence modeling is very extensive and continuously updated with new achievements and improvements of the models. Modern advances in computer speed offer the potential for elaborate numerical analysis of turbulent fluid flow while advances in instrumentation are creating large amounts of data. This book covers these topics in great detail. - Covers the fundamentals of turbulence updated with recent developments - Focuses on hybrid methods such as DES and wall-modeled LES - Gives an updated treatment of numerical simulation and data analysis


Modeling and Simulation of Turbulent Mixing and Reaction

Modeling and Simulation of Turbulent Mixing and Reaction

Author: Daniel Livescu

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2020-02-19

Total Pages: 273

ISBN-13: 9811526435

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This book highlights recent research advances in the area of turbulent flows from both industry and academia for applications in the area of Aerospace and Mechanical engineering. Contributions include modeling, simulations and experiments meant for researchers, professionals and students in the area.


Advances in Turbulence

Advances in Turbulence

Author: Henry França Meier

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2023-05-10

Total Pages: 213

ISBN-13: 3031259904

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This book presents selected papers from the 12th edition of the Spring School of Transition and Turbulence which took place in 2020. The papers cover applications on a number of industrial processes, such as the automotive, aeronautics, chemicals, oil and gas, food, nanotechnology, and others. The readers find out research and applied works on the topics of aerodynamics, computational fluid dynamics, instrumentation and experiments, multi-phase flows, and theoretical and analytical modeling.


Turbulent Flows

Turbulent Flows

Author: Jean Piquet

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-04-17

Total Pages: 767

ISBN-13: 3662035596

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obtained are still severely limited to low Reynolds numbers (about only one decade better than direct numerical simulations), and the interpretation of such calculations for complex, curved geometries is still unclear. It is evident that a lot of work (and a very significant increase in available computing power) is required before such methods can be adopted in daily's engineering practice. I hope to l"Cport on all these topics in a near future. The book is divided into six chapters, each· chapter in subchapters, sections and subsections. The first part is introduced by Chapter 1 which summarizes the equations of fluid mechanies, it is developed in C~apters 2 to 4 devoted to the construction of turbulence models. What has been called "engineering methods" is considered in Chapter 2 where the Reynolds averaged equations al"C established and the closure problem studied (§1-3). A first detailed study of homogeneous turbulent flows follows (§4). It includes a review of available experimental data and their modeling. The eddy viscosity concept is analyzed in §5 with the l"Csulting ~alar-transport equation models such as the famous K-e model. Reynolds stl"Css models (Chapter 4) require a preliminary consideration of two-point turbulence concepts which are developed in Chapter 3 devoted to homogeneous turbulence. We review the two-point moments of velocity fields and their spectral transforms (§ 1), their general dynamics (§2) with the particular case of homogeneous, isotropie turbulence (§3) whel"C the so-called Kolmogorov's assumptions are discussed at length.