Turbulence in Stellarators and Tokamaks - Progress in the Dutch Fusion Program
POSTER
Abstract
An overview of turbulence research at the Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research and the Eindhoven University of Technology is given. In the Wendelstein 7-X stellarator, high-pressure configurations are susceptible to a non-ideal, sub-threshold kinetic-ballooning mode, which impacts zonal flows and substantially boosts transport well below the ballooning limit. A perturbative theory using an energy-dependent Krook operator is developed that captures growth-rate trends with collisionality for trapped-electron modes (TEMs) in this device. For tokamaks with shaped flux surfaces, it is found that a large negative or positive triangularity δ results in reduced TEM transport, an effect quasilinear models can capture only for negative δ due to changes in zonal-flow residual for δ > 0. In both tokamaks and reversed-field pinches, global gyrokinetic simulations with background currents capture tearing-mode physics and show complex interactions in the nonlinear state. Self-consistent multi-scale simulations how that TEM turbulence is affected by the presence of saturated tearing modes. Electron cyclotron current drive has been implemented in a gyrokinetic framework, and initial tests show that both ion- and electron-scale turbulence can be regulated through targeted current drive and heating.
*This work has been carried out within the framework of the EUROfusion Consortium, partially funded by the European Union via the Euratom Research and Training Programme (Grant Agreement No. 101052200 - EUROfusion). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the authors only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Commission. Neither the European Union or the European Commission can be held responsible for them.
Presenters
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M.J. Pueschel
- Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research
- Dutch Institute for Fundamental Research