Understanding and Mitigating the Neutral Gas Barrier in High-Density LAPD Plasmas

POSTER

Abstract

The Large Plasma Device (LAPD) parameter regime has greatly expanded following its 2020 upgrades, which included a Lanthanum Hexaboride cathode and a gas-puffing system. Recently, a mirror configuration has explored high-density (n ~ 6x1013 cm-3, Te ~ 2 eV) and warm plasma (n ~ 2x1012 cm-3, Te ~ 17 eV) operational regimes. A fixed mirror ratio of three was employed at the plasma source, while the far-end ratio was systematically varied from one to seven. In the high-density regime, traditional gas feed using mass flow controllers introduced significant axial gradients. Diagnostics (Langmuir probes, microwave interferometer, fast-ion gauges, spectroscopy, Thomson scattering) revealed a dense neutral layer build-up at the leading edge of the expanding plasma, limiting spatial uniformity. A three-step neutral pumping process (edge injection, bulk ionization, leading-edge recombination/charge exchange) was identified, explaining the plasma's spatial and temporal evolution. Optimizing the gas-puffing system, cathode emissivity, and discharge power pushed this neutral barrier to LAPD's far-end, producing plasma with flat radial profiles and minimal axial variations over the 18 m column. These results demonstrate LAPD's unique capability to provide a robust platform for exploring novel plasma regimes.

*The experiment was conducted at the Basic Plasma Science Facility at UCLA, which is supported by the US DOE and NSF.

Presenters

  • Shreekrishna Tripathi

    • University of California, Los Angeles

Authors

  • Shreekrishna Tripathi

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Patrick Pribyl

    • University of California , Los Angeles
    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Walter N Gekelman

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Jia Han

    • University of California, Los Angeles
    • University of California Los Angeles
  • Stephen T Vincena

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Christoph Niemann

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Zoltan Lucky

    • University of Californa, Los Angeles
  • Thomas R Look

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Mel Abler

    • University of California Los Angeles