Confinement Scaling Projections for Local Helicity Injection Plasma Startup on Pegasus-III
POSTER
Abstract
Ip(t) in plasmas produced by Local Helicity Injection (LHI) is described by global helicity conservation and a Taylor relaxation limit that is less restrictive as the device size and BT is increased. In the helicity-limited regime, the ability to project Ip(t) depends on understanding the dissipation of injected helicity. As no first-principles model presently exists for confinement during LHI (during which stochastic and/or reconnection-driven transport may also occur), modeling to date has assumed resistive dissipation (η∼Te-3/2) and utilized tokamak τE scalings. Observations of LHI plasmas on Pegasus at BT < 0.15 T in transport equilibrium were consistent with estimates from neo-Alcator and collisional stochastic models, assuming modest auxiliary heating from reconnection. Modeling considering the expanded helicity drive, increased BT (< 0.60 T), and ne in Pegasus-III suggests favorable, distinguishable trends in Ip and Te amongst the assumed confinement regimes. Recent extensions to an LHI 0D power-balance model incorporate a dynamic estimate of τE and self-consistently find Ip(t) and Te(t) to treat scenarios outside transport equilibrium and assist in design and execution of initial Pegasus-III LHI studies.
*Work supported by US DOE grants DE-SC0019008 and DE-SC0020402.
Presenters
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Justin D Weberski
- University of Wisconsin-Madison
- University of Wisconsin - Madison