The Role and Impacts of Isotope Mass on Burning Plasma Performance from DIII-D Similarity Experiments
POSTER
Abstract
The performance of burning plasmas is strongly influenced by the ion mass, MI, which affects global energy and impurity particle confinement times, L-H power threshold, pedestal height, width, ELM characteristics, energetic particle modes, and RMP ELM-suppression. To understand the mechanisms behind these MI dependencies and enable more accurate extrapolations towards D-T plasmas in ITER or an FPP, a set of systematic experiments and related modeling were organized and performed at DIII-D in similar hydrogen and deuterium plasmas. Several techniques for reducing PLH in hydrogen plasmas were found: helium gas puffing, initiating L-H transitions at lower Ip and neoclassical toroidal viscosity rotation driven by non-resonant magnetic perturbations [1]. The H-mode pedestal width and pressure height increase while fELM decreases with MI in dimensionally similar plasmas, and RMP ELM-suppression has so far not been achieved in hydrogen within the known deuterium access criteria [2]. Core turbulence amplitude surprisingly increases with MI, counter to the lower observed transport, but the radial correlation length decreases [3]; CGYRO simulations indicate a shift to higher wavenumber instabilities at lower MI. For a given injected power, Alfven eigenmode amplitudes and fast ion transport are generally higher for higher Mfast and MI, consistent with TGLF-EP calculations and of potential concern for D-T plasmas [4].
**Work supported by US-DOE under DE-FG02-08ER54999, DE-FG02-04ER54698, DE-SC0020287, and DE-SC0022270.
Publication: [1] L. Schmitz et al., Nucl. Fusion 62, 126050 (2022).
[2] N. Leuthold et al. Nucl. Fusion 64, 026017 (2024).
[3] G. McKee, E. Perez, K. Thome et al., Proc. IAEA-Fusion Energy Conference, London, UK (2023).
[4] M. VanZeeland et al., Nucl. Fusion 64, 056033 (2024).
Presenters
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George R McKee
- University of Wisconsin-Madison
- University of Wisconsin, Madison