Impact of magnetohydrodynamic on access and dynamics of X-point radiator regimes (XPR)

Thesis topic details

General information

Organisation

The French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) is a key player in research, development and innovation in four main areas :
• defence and security,
• nuclear energy (fission and fusion),
• technological research for industry,
• fundamental research in the physical sciences and life sciences.

Drawing on its widely acknowledged expertise, and thanks to its 16000 technicians, engineers, researchers and staff, the CEA actively participates in collaborative projects with a large number of academic and industrial partners.

The CEA is established in ten centers spread throughout France
  

Reference

SL-DRF-26-0457  

Direction

DRF

Thesis topic details

Category

Corpuscular physics and outer space

Thesis topics

Impact of magnetohydrodynamic on access and dynamics of X-point radiator regimes (XPR)

Contract

Thèse

Job description

ITER and future fusion powerplants will need to operate without degrading too much the plasma facing components (PFC) in the divertor, the peripheral element with is dedicated to heat and particle exhaust in tokamaks. In this context, two key factors must be considered: heat fluxes must stay below engineering limits both in stationary conditions and during violent transient events. An operational regime recently developed can satisfy those two constraints: the X-point Radiator (XPR). Experiments on many tokamaks, in particular WEST which has the record plasma duration in this regime (> 40 seconds), have shown that it allowed to drastically reduce heat fluxes on PFCs by converting most of the plasma energy into photons and neutral particles, and that it also was able to mitigate – or even suppress – deleterious magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) edge instabilities known as ELMs (edge localised modes). The mechanisms governing these mitigation and suppression are still poorly understood. Additionally, the XPR itself can become unstable and trigger a disruption, i.e., a sudden loss of plasma confinement cause by global MHD instabilities.
The objectives of this PhD are: (i) understand the physics at play during the interaction XPR-ELMs, and (ii) optimise the access and stability of the XPR regime. To do so, the student will use the 3D non linear MHD code JOREK, the European reference code in the field. The goal is to define the operational limits of a stable XPR with small or no ELMs, and identify the main actuators (quantity and species of injected impurities, plasma geometry).
A participation to experimental campaigns of the WEST tokamak (operated by IRFM at CEA Cadarache) – and of the MAST-U tokamak operated by UKAEA – is also envisaged to confront numerical results and predictions to experimental measurements.

University / doctoral school

Physique et Sciences de la Matière (ED352)
Aix-Marseille Université

Thesis topic location

Site

Cadarache

Requester

Position start date

01/10/2026

Person to be contacted by the applicant

FIL Alexandre alexandre.fil@cea.fr
CEA
DRF/IRFM//GEDS
CEA Cadarache
13108 Saint Paul Lez Durance
0442254707

Tutor / Responsible thesis director

Tamain Patrick patrick.tamain@cea.fr
CEA
DRF/IRFM
CEA Cadarache
IRFM/SPPF bat 513
13108 St Paul lez Durance Cedex
FRANCE
0442252616

En savoir plus

https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexandre-f-7032ab41/
https://irfm.cea.fr/
https://jorek.eu/