Link between tearing mode activity and flat temperature profiles via edge cooling by neutral inventory in LTX-β
POSTER
Abstract
Flat electron temperature profiles (Te(r)) can be sustained while maintaining constant average density (neave) below a threshold (neaveth) of ~ 1019 m-3 in LTX-β tokamak, which features lithium coated, low-recycling first wall. Above neaveth, Te(r) shifts from flat to peaked and a tearing mode is destabilized. Due to low recycling, the achieved neave can be controlled precisely by external fueling and hence, a certain threshold of the edge neutral inventory is experimentally manifested through neaveth. Goal of the present work is to investigate the role of edge neutrals in determining Te(r) and MHD stability in the unique low-recycling regime of LTX-β. Our hypothesis is that the peaking of Te(r) beyond neaveth is due to the edge cooling by the cold neutrals beyond a critical fueling flux. At lower fueling flux, flat Te(r) results in broader pressure profile and lower resistivity, which in turn stabilizes the tearing mode. This is supported by edge neutral density estimation by DEGAS 2 code. Linear tearing stability analysis with M3D-C1 predicts that plasmas with neave > 1019 are highly susceptible to a n = 1 tearing mode. q profile and Te(r) scan confirms that broader pressure profile, influenced by the flatness of Te(r) stabilizes the mode for neave < 1019 m-3. This study shows for the first time that the neutral inventory at the edge could be a deciding factor for the achievability of the unique flat Te(r) operation regime and the excitation of tearing activity.
*Work is supported by US DOE awards DE-AC02-09CH11466, DE-SC0023481and DE-SC0019239.
Publication: "Investigating the role of edge neutrals in exciting tearing mode activity and achieving flat temperature profiles in LTX-β" by Banerjee, Santanu; Boyle, Dennis; Maan, Anurag; Ferraro, N; Wilkie, George; Majeski, Richard; Podesta, Mario; Bell, Ronald; Hansen, Christopher; Capecchi, William; Elliott, Drew. Submitted in Nuclear Fusion.
Presenters
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Santanu Banerjee
- Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory