Non-Solenoidal Startup Using High-Field-Side Local Helicity Injection on the Pegasus ST
ORAL
Abstract
Local Helicity Injection (LHI) is a non-solenoidal startup technique that utilizes electron current injectors at the plasma edge to initiate a tokamak-like discharge. Injection on the high-field-side (HFS) provides significantly more helicity input than the low-field-side (LFS), but geometry constraints and increased PMI narrow the operating space as BT increases. LFS-to-HFS handoff enables full-field operation up to Ip ~ 0.2 MA. Thomson measurements show a flat Te profile (Te,0 ~ 50 eV) during initial LFS startup that transitions to peaked Te and ne profiles (Te,0 ~ 125 eV, ne,0 ~ 1×1019 m-3) during the HFS drive. During HFS injection, high-amplitude n = 1 magnetic oscillations, attributed to large-scale instability of the injected current streams, can abruptly disappear while broadband magnetic fluctuations in the plasma edge region shift to higher frequency and presumably shorter wavelengths. This transition is coincident with a 10–20% increase in the net current drive efficiency. Initial visible bremsstrahlung measurements indicate average Zeff < 2.5 at the end of the LHI injection phase. New experiments with the HFS injectors moved to smaller Rinj will test scalability to higher Ip via increased helicity injection rate.
*Work supported by US DOE grant DE-FG02-96ER54375.
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Presenters
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G. M. Bodner
- University of Wisconsin-Madison