Strong mitigation of edge-localized modes has been observed on Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak, when lower hybrid waves (LHWs) are applied to H-mode plasmas with ion cyclotron resonant heating. This has been demonstrated to be due to the formation of helical current filaments flowing along field lines in the scrape-off layer induced by LHW. This leads to the splitting of the outer divertor strike points during LHWs similar to previous observations with resonant magnetic perturbations. The change in the magnetic topology has been qualitatively modeled by considering helical current filaments in a field-line-tracing code.
The EAST research program aims to demonstrate steady-state long-pulse advanced high-performance H-mode operations with ITER-like poloidal configuration and RF-dominated heating schemes. Since last IAEA FEC, EAST has been upgraded with all ITER-relevant auxiliary heating and current drive systems, enabling the investigation of plasma profile control by coupling/integration of various combinations. By means of the 4.6 GHz and 2.45 GHz LHCD systems, H-mode can be obtained and maintained at relatively high density, even up to n e ~ 4.5 × 10 19 m-3 , where a current drive effect is still observed. Significant progress has been achieved on EAST, including: i). Demonstration of a steady-state scenario (fully non-inductive with V loop ~ 0.0V at high β P ~ 1.8 and high performance (H 98,y2 > 1.0) in upper single-null (ε ~ 1.6) configuration with the tungsten divertor; ii) Discovery of a stationary ELM-stable H-mode regime with 4.6 GHz LHCD; iii) achievement of ELM suppression in slowly-rotating H-mode plasma with the application of n = 1 and 2 RMPs.
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