<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><metadata xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" xmlns="http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/"><dcterms:title>Performance assessment of long-legged tightly-baffled divertor geometries in the ARC reactor concept</dcterms:title><dcterms:identifier>https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/NMVUFS</dcterms:identifier><dcterms:creator>Michael Robert Knox Wigram, Brian LaBombard, Maxim V. Umansky, Adam Q Kuang, Theodore Golfinopoulos, Jim L. Terry, Daniel Brunner, Marvin E. Rensink, Christopher P. Ridgers, Dennis G. Whyte</dcterms:creator><dcterms:publisher>Harvard Dataverse</dcterms:publisher><dcterms:issued>2020-06-03</dcterms:issued><dcterms:modified>2020-06-03T18:14:05Z</dcterms:modified><dcterms:description>Extremely intense power exhaust channels are projected for tokamak-based fusion power reactors; a means to handle them remains to be demonstrated. Advanced divertor configurations have been proposed as potential solutions. Recent modelling of tightly baffled, long-legged divertor geometries for the divertor test tokamak concept, ADX, has shown that these concepts may access passively stable, fully detached regimes over a broad range of parameters. The question remains as to how such divertors may perform in a reactor setting. To explore this, numerical simulations are performed with UEDGE for the long-legged divertor geometry proposed for the ARC pilot plant conceptual design - a device with projected heat flux power width (λq||) of 0.4 mm and power exhaust of 93 MW - first for a simplified Super-X divertor configuration (SXD) and then for the actual X-point target divertor (XPTD) being proposed. It is found that the SXD, combined with 0.5% fixed-fraction neon impurity concentration, can produce passively stable, detached divertor regimes for power exhausts in the range of 80-108 MW - fully accommodating ARC's power exhaust. The XPTD configuration is found to reduce the strike-point temperature by a factor of ~10 compared to the SXD for small separations (~1.4λq||) between main and divertor X-point magnetic flux surfaces. Even greater potential reductions are identified for reducing separations to ~1λq|| or less. The power handling response is found to be insensitive to the level of cross-field convective or diffusive transport assumed in the divertor leg. By raising the separatrix density by a factor of 1.5, stable fully detached divertor solutions are obtained that fully accommodate the ARC exhaust power without impurity seeding. To our knowledge, this is the first time an impurity-free divertor power handling scenario has been obtained in edge modelling for a tokamak fusion power reactor with λq|| of 0.4 mm.</dcterms:description><dcterms:subject>Physics</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>ARC</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>detached</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>divertor</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>modelling</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>power handling</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>UEDGE</dcterms:subject><dcterms:date>2020-06-03</dcterms:date><dcterms:rights>This dataset is made available without information on how it can be used. You should communicate with the Contact(s) specified before use.</dcterms:rights></metadata>