Deconvolving the roles of E×B shear and pedestal structure in the energy confinement quality of Super H-mode experiments

ORAL

Abstract

Recent experiments on DIII-D have validated previous analysis results suggesting that high plasma toroidal rotation, not high pedestal pressure, plays the essential role in achieving very high energy confinement quality (H98y2>1.5) in super H-mode plasmas. Quasi-linear gyrofluid and nonlinear gyrokinetic transport modeling showed that the contribution from rotation in the core E×B shear is by far the main mechanism responsible for H98y2  well in excess of standard H-mode. H98y2 ~ 1.2 was predicted without E×B shear in high pedestal super H-mode plasmas. The new experiments confirm H98y2~1.2 in high pedestal discharges with low E×B shear obtained by reducing the injected neutral beam torque at constant power. Conversely, high rotation shear discharges maintain very high confinement quality (H98y2 >2), despite ~40% lower pedestal obtained by reducing the plasma triangularity. These results are consistent with previous simulations of the ITER Baseline Scenario using a super H-mode pedestal [1], showing that the predicted energy confinement quality is not above standard H-mode even at the highest pedestal pressure.

[1] W.M. Solomon, et al., Phys. Plasmas 23 (2016) 056105

*Supported by the US DOE under DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-AC02-09CH11466, DE-SC0010685, DE-SC0018287, DE-SC0016154.

Presenters

  • Andrea M. M Garofalo

    • General Atomics - San Diego
    • General Atomics

Authors

  • Andrea M. M Garofalo

    • General Atomics - San Diego
    • General Atomics
  • Siye Ding

    • Oak Ridge Assoc Univ
  • Wayne M Solomon

    • General Atomics - San Diego
  • Brian A Grierson

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
  • Christopher G Holland

    • University of California - San Diego
    • University of California, San Diego
  • Xiang Jian

    • University of California, San Diego
  • Matthias Knolker

    • General Atomics
  • Florian M. Laggner

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
  • Alessandro Marinoni

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
  • Tom H Osborne

    • General Atomics
    • General Atomics - San Diego
  • Craig C Petty

    • General Atomics - San Diego
    • General Atomics