The transition from toroidal counter- to co- rotation in the core plasma has
been observed at L to H transition in several tokamaks. Spontaneous reversal
has also been observed in TCV beyond a threshold in the density. We develop a
model based on the following phenomenology: (1) the increase of the gradient of
the pressure triggers formation on a fast time scale of cells of convection
(similar to Rayleigh-Benard (RB), but with a single sign of vorticity); (2)
poloidal rotation is induced by the envelope of the peripheric velocity of the
convection cells; via the baroclinic term the gradients of temperature and
density sustain the poloidal rotation against the decay due to the parallel
viscosity; (3) the fast increase of poloidal flow induces a high time
derivative of the radial electric field; (4) the neoclassical polarization
creates a series of parallel accelerations (kiks on each bounce) of the trapped
ions, leading to an increase of the toroidal precession or to its reversal; the
source of energy is the work done by the radial electric field. (5) the
diffusion transfers on resistive scale the toroidal momentum from the trapped
ions to the untrapped ones. The correlated interactions are examined and the
estimated time scales are found to be compatible with the observations.Comment: Presented at the H-mode Workshop (Oxford, 2011