Experimental basis in support of an alternative low plasma current path for the Q=10 goal in ITER
ORAL
Abstract
Experiments on DIII-D have achieved line-averaged density Greenwald fraction (fGr) above 1 simultaneously with H98y2 around 1.5, providing an experimental basis that addresses the need for an alternative low plasma current path to the Q=10 goal in ITER. As stated in a recent ITER report [Loarte, ITR-24-004 (2024)], ITER is seeking an alternative higher q95 (≥6) plan for its Q=10 mission. The target Ip is around 7.5 MA at BT=5.3 T. A dedicated 0-D calculation in this study shows a requirement of fGr≥1.0 and H98y2>1.2 at Ip≤12 MA while keeping βT and density constant as the original values in the 15 MA case. Further reduced Ip requires higher fGr and higher H98y2, simultaneously. There was no experimental support for such operating space due to insufficient H98y2 at fGr≥1.0, until the recent high poloidal-beta (βP) experiments on DIII-D [Ding, Nature (2024)]. A synergy between increased H98y2 and increased fGr is observed in the experiment, due to the build-up of an internal transport barrier at large radius in the temperature and density channels. Turbulence suppression at higher density gradient has been observed in both transport modeling and turbulence measurements in the experiment. This result not only supports the previous ITER integrated modeling work [Ding, 28th IAEA FEC (2021)] for Q=10 using a scenario with low plasma current (~8 MA), high βP, and fGr above 1, but also lays a physics foundation for the latest ITER experimental plan.
*Supported by the US DOE under DE-FC02-04ER54698 and DE-SC0010685.
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Presenters
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Siye Ding
- General Atomics