4.5 Article

An improved current potential method for fast computation of stellarator coil shapes

Journal

NUCLEAR FUSION
Volume 57, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1741-4326/aa57d4

Keywords

stellarator; coil; optimization; modular coils; ill-posed problems; regularization; helical plasmas

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Fusion Energy Science [DE-FG02-93ER54197]
  2. Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]

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Several fast methods for computing stellarator coil shapes are compared, including the classical NESCOIL procedure (Merkel 1987 Nucl. Fusion 27 867), its generalization using truncated singular value decomposition, and a Tikhonov regularization approach we call REGCOIL in which the squared current density is included in the objective function. Considering W7-X and NCSX geometries, and for any desired level of regularization, we find the REGCOIL approach simultaneously achieves lower surface-averaged and maximum values of both current density (on the coil winding surface) and normal magnetic field (on the desired plasma surface). This approach therefore can simultaneously improve the free-boundary reconstruction of the target plasma shape while substantially increasing the minimum distances between coils, preventing collisions between coils while improving access for ports and maintenance. The REGCOIL method also allows finer control over the level of regularization, it preserves convexity to ensure the local optimum found is the global optimum, and it eliminates two pathologies of NESCOIL: the resulting coil shapes become independent of the arbitrary choice of angles used to parameterize the coil surface, and the resulting coil shapes converge rather than diverge as Fourier resolution is increased. We therefore contend that REGCOIL should be used instead of NESCOIL for applications in which a fast and robust method for coil calculation is needed, such as when targeting coil complexity in fixed-boundary plasma optimization, or for scoping new stellarator geometries.

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