Solenoid-Free Startup at Increasing B<sub>T</sub> in the Pegasus-III Experiment
POSTER
Abstract
The Pegasus-III Experiment (A ~ 1.2, Ip ≤ 0.3 MA, BT ≤ 0.6 T) is a newly upgraded US facility developing the physics and technology basis of solenoid-free startup. Such methods are critical to next-step STs and may simplify the cost and complexity of tokamak fusion energy systems by reducing the demands of—or need for—a central solenoid. The Pegasus-III upgrade quadrupled BT to demonstrate local helicity injection (LHI) at higher field, enable tests of coaxial helicity injection (CHI), and support a 28 GHz RF heating and current drive system for comparative and synergistic startup scenarios. The first physics campaign replicated prior LHI scenarios at 0.15 T and extended them to the 0.3 T, Ip > 0.2 MA regime with a new injector system, consistent with expectations from global Taylor relaxation and helicity balance limits. Studies of Te scaling, impurities, and electron Bernstein wave emission during LHI have begun, supported by new and upgraded diagnostics. Experiments at 0.6 T are in progress. Near-term plans include testing a new noncircular injector that may optimize the Taylor and helicity limits; fielding a dual-electrode CHI system that is in fabrication for CHI scenarios; and characterizing EBE to optimize the microwave system.
*Work supported by US DOE grant DE-SC0019008.
Presenters
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Michael W Bongard
- University of Wisconsin-Madison