First reduced model for integrated computations of helicon wave heating and current drive in magnetic fusion plasmas
Abstract
Fast predictive modelling of radio-frequency heating and current drive is important for integrated tokamak scenario design, yet kinetic calculations of helicon-wave absorption remain too computationally expensive for large-scale parameter scans. We present a reduced model for helicon-wave heating and current drive that retains the dominant parallel electron Landau-damping channel. The wave response is evaluated on the cold-plasma dispersion root, and a single-Landau-pole correction is introduced to obtain compact expressions for the local damping rate and current-drive efficiency. The model is benchmarked against the Chiu-Chan heating model using approximately 1.6 million samples covering representative conditions of EAST, HL-3, DIII-D and KSTAR. The reduction error is found to be governed primarily by the electron Landau parameter and electron beta. Within an identified sub-lower-hybrid-frequency validity window, results from different devices collapse onto a common error curve, which enables an empirical correction that is further tested using ITER-like and BEST-like extrapolation cases. Near and above the lower-hybrid frequency, the agreement deteriorates rapidly owing to changes in the cold-dispersion root structure and the breakdown of the single-branch WKB description. When coupled to a reduced current-drive source, the corrected heating model gives a median deviation of 10.8 percent from the Landau-channel Ehst-Karney reference and reproduces published CFETR current-density profiles. The resulting model provides a computationally efficient reduced closure for helicon-wave heating and current-drive calculations, together with physically interpretable limits on its range of validity.
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