Recent high-q<sub>min</sub> scenario development efforts on the DIII-D tokamak
POSTER
Abstract
Steady-state fusion pilot plant concepts are often designed around scenarios with elevated safety factor profiles. Exclusion of low order rational surfaces is thought to prevent dangerous 2/1 tearing modes and disallows sawtooth crashes. High-qmin plasmas in DIII-D can achieve safety factor values set forth in studies like CAT-DEMO1 (qmin > 2, q95 ~ 5–6.5), but have yet to reach requisite βN (~3.5–4.5). The stage 1 “Shape and Volume Rise” (SVR) divertor, which increases elongation, triangularity, and volume, was predicted to improve high-qmin plasma performance via increased confinement quality, βN limits, and pedestal pressure. However, experiments have found stronger shaping alone is insufficient to raise pedestal pressure, a key part of the predicted improvements. Two additional gyrotrons were installed concurrently with the SVR such that ~3.5 MW of electron cyclotron heating and current drive (ECH&CD) power was available. In the discharge evolution, shortly after ECCD injection, unintended internal transport barriers (ITBs) formed that were not observed in reference plasmas. These ITBs were all followed by tearing modes that locked, some of which cause full disruption, others of which unlock and minimally reduce confinement. Plasmas of the latter variety achieved, even surpassing in some cases, the flattop βN targets. Qualities of high-qmin ITBs, MHD stability, and potential methods to create stable ITBs without NTMs are explored.
[1] R.J. Buttery et al. NF 61 046028 (2021)
[1] R.J. Buttery et al. NF 61 046028 (2021)
*This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344 and General AtomicsDIII-D Contract DE-FC02-04ER54698. This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Fusion Energy Sciences.
Publication: Planned paper for submission to Nuclear Fusion or similar
Presenters
-
Genevieve H DeGrandchamp
- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory