Nonlinear Simulations of Trapped Electron Mode Turbulence in Low Magnetic Shear Stellarators

ORAL

Abstract

Optimized stellarators, like the Helically Symmetric eXperiment (HSX), often operate with small global magnetic shear to avoid low-order rational surfaces and magnetic islands. Nonlinear, flux-tube gyrokinetic simulations of density-gradient-driven Trapped Electron Mode (TEM) turbulence in HSX shows two distinct spectral fluctuation regions: long-wavelength slab-like TEMs localized by global magnetic shear that extend along field lines and short-wavelength TEMs localized by local magnetic shear to a single helical bad curvature region. The slab-like TEMs require computational domains significantly larger than one poloidal turn and are computationally expensive, making turbulent optimization studies challenging. A computationally more efficient, zero-average-magnetic-shear approximation is shown to sufficiently describe the relevant nonlinear physics and replicate finite-shear computations, and can be exploited in quasilinear models based on linear gyrokinetics as a feasible optimization tool. TEM quasilinear heat fluxes are computed with the zero-shear approximation and compared to experimentally-relevant nonlinear gyrokinetic TEM heat fluxes for HSX.

*Research supported by U.S. DoE grants DE-FG02-99ER54546, DE-FG02-93ER54222 and DE-FG02-89ER53291.

Authors

  • B. J. Faber

    • Univ of Wisconsin, Madison
    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • M.J. Pueschel

    • Univ of Wisconsin, Madison
  • P.W. Terry

    • Univ of Wisconsin, Madison
  • C.C. Hegna

    • Univ of Wisconsin, Madison