Pursuit of high performance, small ELM, high-q<sub>min</sub> plasmas with stronger shaping
POSTER
Abstract
Fusion pilot plant steady-state designs such as CAT-DEMO consider operation with qmin > 2 and q95 ~ 5–6.5, but at higher βN (~3.5–4.5) than has been achieved experimentally in DIII-D high qmin (qmin > 2) plasmas. These are not limited by ideal or resistive wall modes, and lower order rational q surfaces are excluded to prevent most deleterious instabilities; however, operation at high βN (> 3.5) is still often stifled by tearing modes. Maintaining qmin > 2 is another challenge, requiring significant off-axis current drive. Recent experiments used upgraded electron cyclotron current drive (ECCD) capabilities and the new Stage 1 “Shape and Volume Rise (SVR)” divertor to improve both MHD stability and current drive. Prior to the SVR, ECCD was launched from the top of the machine into a typical double null DIII-D shape. Though EC current was more broadly deposited than ECCD injected from the low field side (LFS), it was often not absorbed. In subsequent experiments, the higher elongation and triangularity SVR shape was used with LFS ECCD only. We examine and compare these experimental results to IPS-FASTRAN predictions, which anticipated higher pedestal pressure and broader pressure profiles, stronger wall stabilization of kink modes, and higher q95 for higher bootstrap fraction.
*This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344 and General Atomics DIII-D Contract DE-FC02-04ER54698. This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Fusion Energy Sciences.
Presenters
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Genevieve H DeGrandchamp
- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory