Current and Future Research on Negative Triangularity on the DIII-D Tokamak
ORAL
Abstract
The results of the 2023 DIII-D Negative Triangularity (NT) Campaign are promising for a fusion pilot plant due to its core-edge integration potential. During the campaign, high confinement (H98y,2≥1), high current (Ip=1.0 MA, q95<3), and high normalized pressure plasmas (βN>2.5), with short impurity confinement times were achieved at high-injected-power in strongly NT-shaped non-ELMing diverted plasmas over a wide operational space. New detailed physics results from this campaign will be presented, such as: the identification of an edge localized MHD mode, “advanced tokamak” studies at higher qmin, and operation at high core radiated fraction. During the 2023 campaign, the plasma control restricted NT plasma shapes, preventing robust operation at reduced δavg and constraining changes to other shaping parameters. Thus, current experimental research at DIII-D is focused on improving NT plasma shape control to address those issues. Also, in the campaign, a detached divertor without impurity seeding was achieved but this required very high density where confinement degradation was observed due to formation of a MARFE. Ongoing edge modeling work is analyzing the campaign data in preparation for the possible future installation of a new NT divertor.
*This work was supported in part by the US Department of Energy under the following awards DE-FC02- 04ER54698, DE-SC0022270, DE-FG02-97ER54415, DE-AC05-00OR22725, DE-AC52-07NA27344, DE-SC0020287, DE-SC0023100.
–
Publication: See NT PPCF Special Issue
Presenters
-
Kathreen E Thome
- General Atomics