Application of a conceptual electron temperature fluctuation diagnostic based on soft X-ray imaging to simulations of tokamak turbulence

POSTER

Abstract

The measurements of temperature fluctuations is important for understanding transport that determines the fusion gain of tokamaks. A new electron temperature fluctuation diagnostic based on soft X-ray imaging has been proposed and has been proven feasible on a simplified model with artificial fluctuations in a circular poloidal cross section[1] and on a more realistic model using fluctuations generated from gyrokinetic simulations in a real D-shape poloidal cross section in NSTX-U. However, the fidelity of the reconstruction of the latter model is lower compared to the former toy model. The applicability of the diagnostic can be sensitive to a number of factors such as the nature of the fluctuations(ITG, ETG...), the configuration of the tokamak, and the plasma conditions in equilibrium(electron density/temperature profile etc.). In this work, we run gyrokinetic simulations for several cases to obtain fluctuation data and then feed it into the diagnostic model to assess the quality of fluctuation reconstructions. The final goal of this work is to fully understand what conditions are favored by the diagnostic, and possibly for those unfavorable conditions, what measures can be taken to improve the quality of reconstructions.

[1]X. Chen et al, Rev. Sci. Instrum., 92:053537, 2021.

*This work has been supported by US. D.O.E. contract DE-SC0019089. Computer simulations were carried out at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02- 05CH11231 and at the MIT-PSFC partition of the Engaging cluster at the MGHPCC facility (www.mghpcc.org) which was funded by DoE grant number DE-FG02-91-ER54109.

Presenters

  • Xiang Chen

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI

Authors

  • Xiang Chen

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
  • Juan Ruiz Ruiz

    • University of Oxford
  • Jon C Rost

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
  • Nathan T Howard

    • MIT
  • Walter Guttenfelder

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
  • Jeff Candy

    • General Atomics - San Diego
    • General Atomics
  • Jerry W Hughes

    • MIT PSFC
  • Robert S Granetz

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
    • MIT
  • Anne E White

    • MIT PSFC
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT