Drive Mechanisms for Peeling-Ballooning Modes and Implications for Kinetic Ballooning Modes

POSTER

Abstract

The EPED model of the H-mode pedestal in tokamak plasmas combines a kinetic ballooning mode (KBM) criterion for the critical pressure gradient with a non-local peeling-ballooning (P-B) mode stability criterion to provide an integrated picture of pedestal structure and ELMs. Employing a set of model tokamak equilibria with pedestal gradients constrained by the KBM criterion, we explore the P-B stability for different pedestal widths. The narrowest widths, corresponding to early in the ELM cycle, are stable. Once a critical width is realised, an intermediate-n P-B mode is destabilised, which we show to be driven by a combination of the kink and curvature contributions to $\delta $W, exceeding field line bending. Although formally of O(n$^{-1})$, we show that the kink term survives to very large n because of steep current density gradients in the pedestal. This kink term is not presently retained in gyro-kinetic codes, but may be important for an accurate prediction of the KBM stability criterion in realistic low collisionality tokamak pedestals.

*This project has received part funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 633053. The views and opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of the European Commission.

Authors

  • Amelia Lunniss

    • Univ of York
  • Howard Wilson

    • York Plasma Institute, University of York
    • Univ of York
  • P.B. Snyder

    • General Atomics
    • GA