Magnetic Reconnection and Ion Heating Experiments with Compact Toroid Injection in Tokamaks on the Madison Symmetric Torus

POSTER

Abstract

Compact toroid (CT) injection has been used in a range of plasma confinement devices for core fueling and magnetic helicity injection. A CT injector has been installed on the Madison Symmetric Torus (MST) with the goal of generating and observing localized ion heating due to magnetic reconnection of an injected CT with a tokamak plasma. We will present measurements from initial experiments with helium CTs of electron density ne ≈ 5 × 1021 m-3 and temperature Te on the order of 10 eV injected into deuterium tokamak plasmas of electron density ne ≈ 3 × 1018 m-3 and temperature Te ≈ 100 eV. Diagnostics used include passive ion Doppler spectroscopy, magnetic sensor arrays, a far-infrared (FIR) interferometer-polarimeter, and a high-speed camera. Passive ion Doppler spectroscopy is used to measure ion temperature of the CT using impurity lines. Electron density measurements are obtained from the FIR interferometer, while magnetic fluctuation activity is measured with in-vessel magnetic sensor arrays. A Phantom v710 camera is used to observe the injected CT plasma. MST can produce plasmas ranging from conventional q(a) > 2 tokamak, through ultra-low-q (0.25 < q(a) < 1), to reversed field pinch (RFP) configurations. This flexibility will allow reconnection ion heating to be investigated in plasmas of varying turbulence and mode activity. In future experiments, CT injection may be used to study turbulent reconnection in RFPs.

*Work supported by U.S. DOE grant DE-SC0018266 and NSF grant PHY 1828159.

Presenters

  • Samuel James Farrar

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison

Authors

  • Samuel James Farrar

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Joseph R Olson

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Karsten J McCollam

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Armand Keyhani

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • John S Sarff

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Alex A Squitieri

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Patrick Tracy

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Nivedan Vishwanath

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • John P Wallace

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Cary B Forest

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison