Impurity Transport Research at the HSX Stellarator

POSTER

Abstract

Predictive models of impurity transport are required to ensure the successful operation of future magnetic confinement fusion devices. As a step towards the creation and validation of such models for stellarator devices, experiments are under way to measure the impurity transport properties of HSX, the first quasisymmetric stellarator. A laser blow-off impurity injection system is used to rapidly deposit a small, controlled, quantity of aluminum into the confinement volume. AXUV photodiode arrays, some of which are equipped with filters that block visible light, but transmit ultra-violet and soft x-ray light, are used to take time-resolved measurements of the impurity radiation. One-dimensional emissivity profiles are recovered from the measurement using an inversion process that accounts for the fully three-dimensional detector views. Impurity confinement times measured during an HSX density scan will be presented, along with data that demonstrates the improvement in impurity injection that occurs when a 10nm layer of chromium is present between the glass and the aluminum.

*Supported by USDOE Grant DE-FG02-93ER54222

Authors

  • C. Clark

    • HSX Plasma Lab, University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • D.T. Anderson

    • University of Wisconsin
    • HSX Plasma Lab, University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • F.S.B. Anderson

    • HSX Plasma Lab, University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • K.M. Likin

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison
    • HSX Plasma Lab, University of Wisconsin - Madison
    • HSX Plasma Lab, University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • F.S.B. Anderson

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • HSX Plasma Lab, University of Wisconsin - Madison
    • HSX Plasma Lab, University of Wisconsin, Madison
    • HSX Plasma Laboratory, University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • K. Zhai

    • HSX Plasma Lab, University of Wisconsin, Madison