Perturbative Transport Experiments and Time-dependent Modeling in Alcator C-Mod and DIII-D
Title | Perturbative Transport Experiments and Time-dependent Modeling in Alcator C-Mod and DIII-D PDF eBook |
Author | Pablo Rodríguez Fernández (Ph. D.) |
Publisher | |
Pages | 191 |
Release | 2019 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Perturbative transport experiments in magnetically confined plasmas have shown, for more than 20 years, that the injection of cold pulses at the plasma edge can trigger the fast increase of core temperature. Because no single standard local transport model tried to date has been able to reproduce satisfactorily all the observed temporal behavior in the experiments, these transient transport phenomena feature prominently as an open question in the community and as a challenge for predictive capabilities in tokamak burning plasmas, such as ITER and SPARC. For the first time after more than two decades of experimental evidence, this Thesis resolves this long-standing enigma in plasma transport, by modeling of experiments conducted on the Alcator C-Mod and DIII-D tokamaks. Predictive integrated simulations with the Trapped Gyro Landau Fluid (TGLF) quasilinear transport model demonstrate that the increase of core temperature in some regimes, and lack thereof in other regimes, can be explained by a change in dominant linear micro-instability in the plasma core. The effect of major radius, electron density and plasma current on the cold pulse are well captured by TGLF, including the relative change in position of the temperature flex point as current density changes. Linear stability analysis of simulated density and current scans in Alcator C-Mod reveals a competition between trapped electron and ion temperature gradient modes as the main driver of the core transient response. Measurements of electron density evolution during the cold-pulse propagation in DIII-D are enabled by a high time resolution density profile reflectometer. The density evolution reveals the quick propagation of a pulse from edge to core, which is the mechanism to transiently increase core temperature in low-collisionality plasmas. The work presented in this Thesis demonstrates that the existence of nonlocal heat transport phenomena is not necessary for explaining the behavior and time scales of cold-pulse experiments in tokamak plasmas.
Confinement and Transport Research in Alcator C-Mod
Title | Confinement and Transport Research in Alcator C-Mod PDF eBook |
Author | Martin Greenwald |
Publisher | |
Pages | 174 |
Release | 2005 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
(cont.) This link unified L-mode and H-mode and established a strong connection between local and global transport. Further work on the role of critical gradient lengths and marginal stability lent quantitative support to the ITG theories for ion transport and have helped elucidate nonlinear saturation mechanisms for the turbulence. Local transport studies demonstrated connections between transport channels, with energy, particle and momentum transport varying across regimes in similar ways. Experiments carried out in collaboration with the DIII-D, ASDEX-U and JET groups confirmed the dimensionless scaling approach over the widest available range in machine sizes. These studies suggest that plasma physics is the dominant influence on transport in the core and pedestal for standard L- and H-mode discharges. Dimensionless scaling experiments have shown a strong improvement in confinement with the normalized gyro-size (1/p*). Confinement was found to be Bohm-like in L-mode and gyro-Bohm-like in H-mode. These experiments also showed a strong degradation in confinement with collisionality. Other articles in this issue discuss impurity transport, momentum transport, H-mode pedestal and threshold physics and internal transport barrier regimes.
Transport Experiments in Alcator C-Mod
Title | Transport Experiments in Alcator C-Mod PDF eBook |
Author | Martin Greenwald |
Publisher | |
Pages | 26 |
Release | 1994 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports
Title | Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 560 |
Release | 1994 |
Genre | Aeronautics |
ISBN |
On the Edge of Magnetic Fusion Devices
Title | On the Edge of Magnetic Fusion Devices PDF eBook |
Author | Sergei Krasheninnikov |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 269 |
Release | 2020-09-07 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 3030495949 |
This book reviews the current state of understanding concerning edge plasma, which bridges hot fusion plasma, with a temperature of roughly one million degrees Kelvin with plasma-facing materials, which have melting points of only a few thousand degrees Kelvin. In a fact, edge plasma is one of the keys to solution for harnessing fusion energy in magnetic fusion devices. The physics governing the processes at work in the edge plasma involves classical and anomalous transport of multispecies plasma, neutral gas dynamics, atomic physics effects, radiation transport, plasma-material interactions, and even the transport of plasma species within the plasma-facing materials. The book starts with simple physical models, then moves on to rigorous theoretical considerations and state-of-the-art simulation tools that are capable of capturing the most important features of the edge plasma phenomena. The authors compare the conclusions arising from the theoretical and computational analysis with the available experimental data. They also discuss the remaining gaps in their models and make projections for phenomena related to edge plasma in magnetic fusion reactors.
The Plasma Boundary of Magnetic Fusion Devices
Title | The Plasma Boundary of Magnetic Fusion Devices PDF eBook |
Author | P.C Stangeby |
Publisher | CRC Press |
Pages | 738 |
Release | 2000-01-01 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 9780750305594 |
The Plasma Boundary of Magnetic Fusion Devices introduces the physics of the plasma boundary region, including plasma-surface interactions, with an emphasis on those occurring in magnetically confined fusion plasmas. The book covers plasma-surface interaction, Debye sheaths, sputtering, scrape-off layers, plasma impurities, recycling and control, 1D and 2D fluid and kinetic modeling of particle transport, plasma properties at the edge, diverter and limiter physics, and control of the plasma boundary. Divided into three parts, the book begins with Part 1, an introduction to the plasma boundary. The derivations are heuristic and worked problems help crystallize physical intuition, which is emphasized throughout. Part 2 provides an introduction to methods of modeling the plasma edge region and for interpreting computer code results. Part 3 presents a collection of essays on currently active research hot topics. With an extensive bibliography and index, this book is an invaluable first port-of-call for researchers interested in plasma-surface interactions.
Iter Physics
Title | Iter Physics PDF eBook |
Author | C Wendell Horton, Jr |
Publisher | World Scientific |
Pages | 248 |
Release | 2015-06-25 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 9814678686 |
The promise of a vast and clean source of thermal power drove physics research for over fifty years and has finally come to collimation with the international consortium led by the European Union and Japan, with an agreement from seven countries to build a definitive test of fusion power in ITER. It happened because scientists since the Manhattan project have envisioned controlled nuclear fusion in obtaining energy with no carbon dioxide emissions and no toxic nuclear waste products.This large toroidal magnetic confinement ITER machine is described from confinement process to advanced physics of plasma-wall interactions, where pulses erupt from core plasma blistering the machine walls. Emissions from the walls reduce the core temperature which must remain ten times hotter than the 15 million degree core solar temperature to maintain ITER fusion power. The huge temperature gradient from core to wall that drives intense plasma turbulence is described in detail.Also explained are the methods designed to limit the growth of small magnetic islands, the growth of edge localized plasma plumes and the solid state physics limits of the stainless steel walls of the confinement vessel from the burning plasma. Designs of the wall coatings and the special 'exhaust pipe' for spent hot plasma are provided in two chapters. And the issues associated with high-energy neutrons — about 10 times higher than in fission reactions — and how they are managed in ITER, are detailed.