672 research outputs found
Towards understanding edge localised mode mitigation by resonant magnetic perturbations in MAST
Type-I Edge Localised Modes (ELMs) have been mitigated in MAST through the
application of n = 3, 4 and 6 resonant magnetic perturbations (RMPs). For each
toroidal mode number of the non-axisymmetric applied fields, the frequency of
the ELMs has been increased significantly, and the peak heat flux on the
divertor plates reduced commensurately. This increase in ELM frequency occurs
despite a significant drop in the edge pressure gradient, which would be
expected to stabilise the peeling-ballooning modes thought to be responsible
for type-I ELMs. Various mechanisms which could cause a destabilisation of the
peeling-ballooning modes are presented, including pedestal widening, plasma
rotation braking, three dimensional corrugation of the plasma boundary and the
existence of radially extended lobe structures near to the X-point. This leads
to a model aimed at resolving the apparent dichotomy of ELM control, that is to
say ELM suppression occurring due to the pedestal pressure reduction below the
peeling-ballooning stability boundary, whilst the reduction in pressure can
also lead to ELM mitigation, which is ostensibly a destabilisation of
peeling-ballooning modes. In the case of ELM mitigation, the pedestal
broadening, 3d corrugation or lobes near the X-point degrade ballooning
stability so much that the pedestal recovers rapidly to cross the new stability
boundary at lower pressure more frequently, whilst in the case of suppression,
the plasma parameters are such that the particle transport reduces the edge
pressure below the stability boundary which is only mildly affected by
negligible rotation braking, small edge corrugation or short, broad lobe
structures.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figures. Copyright (2013) United Kingdom Atomic Energy
Authority. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other
use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of
Physic
Non-linear magnetohydrodynamic modeling of plasma response to resonant magnetic perturbations
The interaction of static Resonant Magnetic Perturbations (RMPs) with
the plasma flows is modeled in toroidal geometry, using the non-linear
resistive MHD code JOREK, which includes the X-point and the
scrape-off-layer. Two-fluid diamagnetic effects, the neoclassical
poloidal friction and a source of toroidal rotation are introduced in
the model to describe realistic plasma flows. RMP penetration is studied
taking self-consistently into account the effects of these flows and the
radial electric field evolution. JET-like, MAST, and ITER parameters are
used in modeling. For JET-like parameters, three regimes of plasma
response are found depending on the plasma resistivity and the
diamagnetic rotation: at high resistivity and slow rotation, the islands
generated by the RMPs at the edge resonant surfaces rotate in the ion
diamagnetic direction and their size oscillates. At faster rotation, the
generated islands are static and are more screened by the plasma. An
intermediate regime with static islands which slightly oscillate is
found at lower resistivity. In ITER simulations, the RMPs generate
static islands, which forms an ergodic layer at the very edge (ψ
≥0.96) characterized by lobe structures near the X-point and results
in a small strike point splitting on the divertor targets. In MAST
Double Null Divertor geometry, lobes are also found near the X-point and
the 3D-deformation of the density and temperature profiles is observed
Solitary magnetic perturbations at the ELM onset
Edge localised modes (ELMs) allow maintaining sufficient purity of tokamak
H-mode plasmas and thus enable stationary H-mode. On the other hand in a future
device ELMs may cause divertor power flux densities far in excess of tolerable
material limits. The size of the energy loss per ELM is determined by
saturation effects in the non-linear phase of the ELM, which at present is
hardly understood. Solitary magnetic perturbations (SMPs) are identified as
dominant features in the radial magnetic fluctuations below 100kHz. They are
typically observed close (+-0.1ms) to the onset of pedestal erosion. SMPs are
field aligned structures rotating in the electron diamagnetic drift direction
with perpendicular velocities of about 10km/s. A comparison of perpendicular
velocities suggests that the perturbation evoking SMPs is located at or inside
the separatrix. Analysis of very pronounced examples showed that the number of
peaks per toroidal turn is 1 or 2, which is clearly lower than corresponding
numbers in linear stability calculations. In combination with strong peaking of
the magnetic signals this results in a solitary appearance resembling modes
like palm tree modes, edge snakes or outer modes. This behavior has been
quantified as solitariness and correlated to main plasma parameters. SMPs may
be considered as a signature of the non-linear ELM-phase originating at the
separatrix or further inside. Thus they provide a handle to investigate the
transition from linear to non-linear ELM phase. By comparison with data from
gas puff imaging processes in the non-linear phase at or inside the separatrix
and in the scrape-off-layer (SOL) can be correlated. A connection between the
passing of an SMP and the onset of radial filament propagation has been found.
Eventually the findings related to SMPs may contribute to a future quantitative
understanding of the non-linear ELM evolution.Comment: submitted to Nuclear Fusio
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