This paper summarizes the status of the COMPASS tokamak, its comprehensive diagnostic equipment and plasma scenarios as a baseline for the future studies. The former COMPASS-D tokamak was in operation at UKAEA Culham, UK in 1992-2002. Later, the device was transferred to the Institute of Plasma Physics of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic (IPP AS CR), where it was installed during 2006-2011. Since 2012 the device has been in a full operation with Type-I and Type-III ELMy H-modes as a base scenario. This enables together with the ITER-like plasma shape and flexible NBI heating system (two injectors enabling co-or balanced injection) to perform ITER relevant studies in different parameter range to the other tokamaks (ASDEX-Upgrade, DIII-D, JET) and to contribute to the ITER scallings. In addition to the description of the device, current status and the main diagnostic equipment, the paper focuses on the characterization of the Ohmic as well as NBIassisted H-modes. Moreover, Edge Localized Modes (ELMs) are categorized based on their frequency dependence on power density flowing across separatrix. The filamentary structure of ELMs is studied and the parallel heat flux in individual filaments is measured by probes on the outer mid-plane and in the divertor. The measurements are supported by observation of ELM and inter-ELM filaments by an ultra-fast camera.
The ball-pen probe (BPP) technique is used successfully to make profile measurements of the electron temperature on the ASDEX Upgrade (Axially Symmetric Divertor Experiment), COMPASS (COMPact ASSembly), and ISTTOK (Instituto Superior Tecnico TOKamak) tokamak. The electron temperature is provided by a combination of the BPP potential (ΦBPP) and the floating potential (Vfl) of the Langmuir probe (LP), which is compared with the Thomson scattering diagnostic on ASDEX Upgrade and COMPASS. Excellent agreement between the two diagnostics is obtained for circular and diverted plasmas and different heating mechanisms (Ohmic, NBI, ECRH) in deuterium discharges with the same formula Te = (ΦBPP - Vfl)/2.2. The comparative measurements of the electron temperature using BPP/LP and triple probe (TP) techniques on the ISTTOK tokamak show good agreement of averaged values only inside the separatrix. It was also found that the TP provides the electron temperature with significantly higher standard deviation than BPP/LP. However, the resulting values of both techniques are well in the phase with the maximum of cross-correlation function being 0.8.
Since the installation of an ITER-like wall, the JET programme has focused on the consolidation of ITER design choices and the preparation for ITER operation, with a specific emphasis given to the bulk tungsten melt experiment, which has been crucial for the final decision on the material choice for the day-one tungsten divertor in ITER. Integrated scenarios have been progressed with the re-establishment of long-pulse, high-confinement H-modes by optimizing the magnetic configuration and the use of ICRH to avoid tungsten impurity accumulation. Stationary discharges with detached divertor conditions and small edge localized modes have been demonstrated by nitrogen seeding. The differences in confinement and pedestal behaviour before and after the ITER-like wall installation have been better characterized towards the development of high fusion yield scenarios in DT. Post-mortem analyses of the plasma-facing components have confirmed the previously reported low fuel retention obtained by gas balance and shown that the pattern of deposition within the divertor has changed significantly with respect to the JET carbon wall campaigns due to the absence of thermally activated chemical erosion of beryllium in contrast to carbon. Transport to remote areas is almost absent and two orders of magnitude less material is found in the divertor.
Axisymmetric geodesic acoustic mode (GAM) oscillations of the magnetic field, plasma potential and electron temperature have been identified on the COMPASS tokamak. This work brings an overview of their electromagnetic properties studied by multi-pin reciprocating probes and magnetic diagnostics. The n = 0 fluctuations form a continuous spectrum in limited plasmas but change to a single dominant peak in diverted configuration. At the edge of diverted plasmas the mode exhibits a non-local structure with a constant frequency over a radial extent of at least several centimeters. Nevertheless, the frequency still reacts on temporal changes of plasma temperature caused by an auxiliary NBI heating as well as those induced by periodic sawtooth crashes. Radial wavelength of the mode is found to be about 1-4 cm, with values larger for the plasma potential than for the electron temperature. The mode propagates radially outward and its radial structure induces oscillations of a poloidal E × B velocity, that can locally reach the level of the mean poloidal flow. Bicoherence analysis confirms a non-linear interaction of GAM with a broadband ambient turbulence. The mode exhibits strong axisymmetric magnetic oscillations that are studied both in the poloidal and radial components of the magnetic field. Their poloidal standing-wave structure was confirmed and described for the first time in diverted plasmas. In limited plasmas their amplitude scales with safety factor. Strong suppression of the magnetic GAM component, and possibly of GAM itself, is observed during co-current but not counter-current NBI.
The first-derivative probe technique was applied to derive data for plasma parameters from the IV Langmuir probe characteristics measured in the plasma boundary region in the COMPASS tokamak and in the TJ-II stellarator. It is shown that in the COMPASS tokamak in the vicinity of the Last Closed Flux Surface (LCFS) the Electron Energy Distribution Function (EEDF) is bi-Maxwellian with the low-temperature electron fraction predominating over the higher temperature one, whereas in the far scrape off layer (SOL) the EEDF is Maxwellian. In the TJ-II stellarator during NBI heated plasma the EEDF in the confined plasma and close to the LCFS is bi-Maxwellian while in the far SOL the EEDF is Maxwellian. In contrast, during the ECR heating phase of the discharge both in the confined plasma and in the SOL the EEDF is bi-Maxwellian. The mechanism for the appearance of a bi-Maxwellian EEDF in the vicinity of the LCFS is discussed. The comparison of the results from probe measurements with ASTRA package and EIRENE code calculations suggests that the main reason of the appearance of a bi-Maxwellian EEDF in the vicinity of the LCFS is the ionization of the neutral atoms. Results for the electron temperatures and densities obtained by the first-derivative probe technique in the COMPASS tokamak and in the TJ-II stellarator were used to evaluate the radial distribution of the parallel power flux density. It is shown that in the vicinity of the LCFS where the EEDF is bi-Maxwellian, the radial distribution of the parallel power flux density is double exponential. It is pointed that in calculations of the parallel power flux density at the LCFS the energy losses from ionization mechanisms have to be taken into account.
Multiple quasicoherent electromagnetic modes with steady-state frequency and different nature and location were observed in the COMPASS tokamak (R = 0.56 m, = 0.2 m) at B t = 1.14 T with Co-NBI (P NBI = 0.2-0.5 MW, E b = 32 keV) at frequencies 5 kHz < f < 250 kHz. Modes were observed in both low and high confinement (L-and H-modes) plasmas. Lower frequency modes with f < 50 kHz were identified as low m tearing and kink MHD modes, while higher frequency modes with 50 kHz < f < 250 kHz were considered as having Alfvénic nature. Unexpectedly, such modes were only observed in the H-mode, both in neutral beam injector-assisted and Ohmic, so the mode driving force is not yet clear. Using the linear MHD code KINX, we initially identified the observed mode with a ballooning structure is as beta induced Alfvén eigenmode (BAE) with m, n < 5, while an antiballooning mode is initially identified as toroidal Alfvén eigenmode (TAE) with m, n < 9.
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