A two-frequency correlation reflectometer has been operated on the Advanced Toroidal Facility (ATF) to measure plasma electron density fluctuations. This reflectometer uses quadrature phase detection to permit true phase measurement of the reflected microwave signal (probing beam). By measuring the phase fluctuations in the reflected probing beam, the amplitude of the density fluctuations can be estimated. Simultaneous two-frequency operation makes it possible to measure the coherence between fluctuations at two radially separated cut-off layers, from which the radial correlation lengths and wavenumbers can be estimated. This reflectometer has been used to study the density fluctuations in the edge gradient region of low density ATF plasmas produced by electron cyclotron heating. These studies have revealed globally coherent turbulence with a radial correlation length of up to -5 cm, a radial wavenumber k, -0 cm-' and a poloidal wavenumber k, -1 cm-I. The rms amplitude of the fluctuations reaches a maximum of approximately 5% at the plasma edge ( p = 1, where p is the flux surface normalized radius) and decreases with decreasing radius to a level of 5 1 %. Simultaneous measurements of the fluctuations with the reflectometer, the heavy ion beam probe and the fast reciprocating Langmuir probe provide consistent results. A comparison of the measurements with simplistic mixing length estimates, fiehe = l/k,L, or fi,/n, = l/k,L,, shows that these estimates are too high by factors of two to more than 100, while a comparison with a more detailed estimate for the pressure gradient driven resistive interchange turbulence yields reasonable agreement with the experimentally measured fluctuation characteristics.
TJ-II stellarator results on modelling and validation of plasma flow asymmetries due to on-surface potential variations, plasma fuelling physics, Alfvén eigenmodes (AEs) control and stability, the interplay between turbulence and neoclassical (NC) mechanisms and liquid metals are reported. Regarding the validation of the neoclassically predicted potential asymmetries, its impact on the radial electric field along the flux surface has been successfully validated against Doppler reflectometry measurements. Research on the physics and modelling of plasma core fuelling with pellets and tracer encapsulated solid pellet injection has shown that, although post-injection particle radial redistributions can be understood qualitatively from NC mechanisms, turbulence and fluctuations are strongly affected during the ablation process. Advanced analysis tools based on transfer entropy have shown that radial electric fields do not only affect the radial turbulence correlation length but are also capable of reducing the propagation of turbulence from the edge into the scrape-off layer. Direct experimental observation of long range correlated structures show that zonal flow structures are ubiquitous in the whole plasma cross-section in the TJ-II stellarator. Alfvénic activity control strategies using ECRH and ECCD as well as the relation between zonal structures and AEs are reported. Finally, the behaviour of liquid metals exposed to hot and cold plasmas in a capillary porous system container was investigated.
If the ion Bernstein wave (IBW) heating power in an H mode discharge of the PBX-M experiment exceeds a threshold power of about 200 kW, a core transport barrier is created in the central region of the plasma. At lower neutral beam injection (NBI) powers, the core barrier is accompanied by an edge L mode. The high edge localized mode (ELM) repetition frequency (1 kHz) prevents the creation of a strong barrier, so the edge first has to make an H-to-L transition before a strong core transport barrier can be created. At higher NBI powers, the ELM repetition frequency is lowered to less than 200 Hz, which allows the immediate creation of a strong core barrier. Edge localized mode loss, which propagates radially first on a fast (non-diffusive) and then on a slow (diffusive) time-scale all the way to the plasma core, is strongly reduced in the core barrier region. Correlated with the reduced ELM loss, the fluctuations in the core barrier region are also strongly reduced, both during the ELM and during the quiet periods between the ELMs. There is strong evidence that the IBW induced poloidal flow shear is responsible for the stabilization of core turbulence and the creation of the core transport barrier. The large perpendicular E × B flow shear component of the measured toroidal velocity in co-injection neutral beam heated discharges seems to be largely cancelled by the ion diamagnetic drift shear produced by large ion pressure gradients in the core barrier region. The value of IBW induced poloidal flow has not been experimentally determined, but its numerical value is found to be a factor of 4 larger than either the toroidal velocity or the ion diamagnetic drift shear components, leaving only IBW induced flow shear as the most probable cause for the turbulence stabilization. The core turbulence suppression and the creation of the core transport barrier is also consistent with expectations from a comparison between the E × B flow shear rate and a rough estimate of the linear ion temperature gradient (ITG) growth rate. The presence of the core barrier region also strongly modifies the other MHD events: crashes on the q = 1.5, 2 surfaces and the disruption.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.