Poloidal asymmetries in the impurity density can be generated by radio
frequency heating in the core and by neoclassical effects in the edge of
tokamak plasmas. In a pedestal case study, using global neoclassical
simulations we find that finite orbit width effects can generate significant
poloidal variation in the electrostatic potential, which varies on a small
radial scale. Gyrokinetic modeling shows that these poloidal asymmetries can be
strong enough to significantly modify turbulent impurity peaking. In the
pedestal the ExB drift in the radial electric field can give a larger
contribution to the poloidal motion of impurities than that of their parallel
streaming. Under such circumstances we find that up-down asymmetries can also
affect impurity peaking.Comment: Paper for 14th International Workshop on Plasma Edge Theory in Fusion
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