Analysis of impurity effects on X-ray measurements in the PFRC-2

POSTER

Abstract

In the Princeton Field-Reversed Configuration-2 (PFRC-2) plasma experiment, X-ray line radiation vs. Bremsstrahlung measurements are of interest in order to measure electron energy distribution functions (EEDFs) from which electron number density ne and temperature Te can be extracted. Three Silicon Drift Detector (SDD) X-ray pulse-height detectors in the center cell energy-analyze the X-ray radiation emissions above 50 eV from three viewing chords, where two are near the central (z=0) plane and the third is near the nozzle. There is a coupling between the origins of the Bremsstrahlung and line radiation spectra: the energy dependence of the EEDF impacts the line radiation, while the effective ionic charge of the plasma (Zeff) impacts the EEDF that is extracted from the measured Bremsstrahlung. In our experiments with liquid-nitrogen-cooled flux conservers, impurities have been shown to increase the measured Bremsstrahlung by an order of magnitude. We have incorporated into our EEDF inversion algorithm the relevant cross-sections to model X-ray line spectra production from plasma impurities, which can allow us to extract ne without reference to Zeff. Additionally, by including models of Bremsstrahlung from high-Z atoms and calibration data from an X-ray gas target tube, we can improve our EEDF fits to the measured spectra and hence obtain more accurate measurements of Te. We describe X-ray measurements of PFRC-2 plasma along with tests of our new model towards improving our measurements of ne and Te.

*This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract number DE-AC02-09CH11466. We are grateful to Princeton Fusion Systems for support, and to B. Berlinger and C. Brunkhorst for excellent technical work.

Presenters

  • Christopher A Galea

    • Princeton Fusion Systems

Authors

  • Christopher A Galea

    • Princeton Fusion Systems
  • Sangeeta P Vinoth

    • Princeton Fusion Systems
  • Samuel Cohen

    • PPPL-Princeton University