Favorable Transport Properties of the Wide Pedestal QH-Mode Regime for ITER Operation

ORAL

Abstract

Recent DIII-D experiments in the ELM-stable Wide Pedestal Quiescent H-mode regime [Ernst IAEA EX/2-2 (2018)] show confinement improves when electron cyclotron heating (ECH) replaces neutral beam power (NBI) (so far up to 77\% ECH)-- promising for burning plasma operation where $\alpha$-particles heat electrons. An Internal Transport Barrier (ITB) forms with on-axis ECH due to a strong inward electron thermal pinch, producing Te0$>$12 keV. Gyrokinetic simulations with GENE show ETG modes are stable and TEMs dominate. Confinement increases 60\% with 1/3 off-axis ECH (no ITB), with ion channel improvement evident in the core and pedestal. Wide Pedestal QH-Mode has been demonstrated with zero injected NBI torque throughout [K. H. Burrell APS 2018]. Separate measurements of the intrinsic torque show it balances the local beam orbit loss torque. The regime has been sustained in ITER shape [T. Wilks APS 2018] where impurity content is reduced relative to double null. Further, confinement does not degrade with NBI power in this regime. Projections indicate ITER Baseline Scenario Parameters with fusion gain 0.4 are attainable with $q_{95}$=3.3 and 6.6 MW NBI at constant power per particle, without the benefit of ECH.

*Supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Awards DE-SC0014264, DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-FG02-08ER54984, DE-SC0019352, DE-AC02-09CH11466, and DE-FG02-97ER54415.

Authors

  • D. Ernst

    • MIT
  • Keith Burrell

    • GA
    • General Atomics
  • C.C. Petty

    • General Atomics
    • GA
    • General Atomics, San Diego, CA
  • K. Barada

    • UCLA
  • Terry Rhodes

    • UCLA
    • University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA
    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • G. Wang

    • UCLA
  • Shaun Haskey

    • PPPL
    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    • PPPL, Princeton, NJ
  • Colin Chrystal

    • GA
    • General Atomics
  • Brian Grierson

    • PPPL
    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
  • Tomas Odstrcil

    • MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • T. Wilks

    • MIT
  • S. Houshmandyar

    • UT-Austin
    • University of Texas-Austin