Initial Achievement of ELM-free Negative Triangularity in the MAST-U Spherical Tokamak

ORAL

Abstract

A negative triangularity (NT) plasma in the spherical torus is achieved and documented for the first time on the MAST-U tokamak. At powers that would typically induced H-mode operation, edge localized modes (ELMs) are eventually suppressed as the triangularity is decreased below δ≲-0.06, allowing for continued operation in an ELM-free state. However, the access criteria for this ELM-free environment appear qualitatively different than previously observed on conventional aspect ratio machines like DIII-D: as an extended period of H-mode operation with Type-III ELMs is sustained early in the discharge even through access to the second stability region for ideal ballooning modes is closed. This observation suggests that stability closure for infinite-n ballooning modes may not be the critical physics responsible for NT-based ELM avoidance in spherical tokamaks. While the electron temperature at the pedestal top drops across the transition to ELM-free operation, a steady rise in core temperature with more negative δ allows for similar normalized β in the ELM-free NT and H-mode positive triangularity shapes. Further exploration of the confinement properties and ELM-free behavior of NT discharges on spherical tokamaks is needed to better understand these phenomena in order to improve confidence in the prediction of NT fusion pilot plant dynamics.

*Work supported by US DOE under awards DE-SC0022272, DE-SC0014264, DE-SC0018991, and DE-SC0021629. This work has been (part-) funded by the EPSRC Energy Programme [grant number EP/W006839/1]. To obtain further information on the data and models underlying this paper please contact PublicationsManager@ukaea.uk*.

Presenters

  • Andrew Oakleigh O Nelson

    • Columbia
    • Columbia University

Authors

  • Andrew Oakleigh O Nelson

    • Columbia
    • Columbia University
  • Charles Vincent

    • UKAEA
  • Himank Anand

    • General Atomics
  • Koki Imada

    • University of York
  • Jack J Lovell

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Jason F Parisi

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton University
    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
  • Will P Wehner

    • General Atomics - San Diego
  • Jayson L Barr

    • General Atomics - San Diego
  • Martin Kochan

    • UKAEA
  • Sam Blackmore

    • UKAEA
    • UKAEA - United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority
  • Graham J McArdle

    • UKAEA
  • Haley S Wilson

    • Columbia University
  • Sophia Guizzo

    • Columbia University
  • Lucia Rondini

    • Columbia University
  • Samuel W Freiberger

    • Columbia Univ
    • Columbia University
  • Carlos Alberto Paz-Soldan

    • Columbia University