Using 3-D shaping to manipulate ITG turbulence saturation in stellarators

POSTER

Abstract

A frontier research area for stellarator design is to develop methods to alter turbulent transport. In this work, efforts are developed to understand how 3-D shaping can be used to affect turbulent transport saturation physics. To accomplish this goal, we utilize a paradigm for turbulent saturation that relies on zonal flow mediated transfer of energy from linear instability to damped eigenmodes. A simplified 3-field fluid model for ion temperature gradient turbulence is developed that allows for the presence of general 3-D geometry. The crucial nonlinear physics is associated with the triplet interaction of a linear instability, a zonal flow and a damped mode. The most vigorous interaction occurs when the three-wave frequency mismatch of these three modes is minimized, connoting a large nonlinear interaction time with saturated turbulence levels proportional to the three-wave frequency mismatch. Initial studies will be geared toward how 3-D geometry can be used to minimize this frequency mismatch.

*Research supported by U. S. DoE under grant nos. DE-FG02-99ER54546 and DE-FG02-89ER53291

Authors

  • C C Hegna

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • U. Wisc.
    • University of Wisconsin
  • P.W. Terry

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • UW-Madison
    • Univ of Wisconsin-Madison
    • Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
    • University of Wisconsin - Madison