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Abstract. The DIII-D tokamak has demonstrated an operational scenario
where the graphite-covered divertor is free of net erosion. Reduction of
divertor carbon erosion is accomplished using a low temperature (detached)
divertor plasma that eliminates physical sputtering. Likewise, the carbon
source rate arising from chemical erosion is found to be very low in the
detached divertor. Near strikepoint regions, the rate of carbon deposition
is 3 cm/burn-year, with a corresponding hydrogenic codeposition rate
> 1kg/m2/burn-year; rates both problematic for steady-state
fusion reactors. The carbon net deposition rate in the divertor is
consistent with carbon arriving from the core plasma region. Carbon influx
from the main wall is measured to be relatively large in the high-density
detached regime and is of sufficient magnitude to account for the deposition
rate in the divertor. Divertor redeposition is therefore determined by
non-divertor erosion and transport. Despite the success in reducing divertor
erosion on DIII-D with detachment, no significant reduction is found in the
core plasma carbon density, illustrating the importance of non-divertor
erosion and the complex coupling between erosion/redeposition and impurity
plasma transport.
IAEA 2001