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Second ballooning stability in high-β, compact stellarators.

Authors :
Ware, A. S.
Westerly, D.
Barcikowski, E.
Berry, L. A.
Fu, G. Y.
Hirshman, S. P.
Lyon, J. F.
Sanchez, R.
Spong, D. A.
Strickler, D. J.
Source :
Physics of Plasmas; May2004, Vol. 11 Issue 5, p2453-2458, 6p
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Second ballooning stability is examined in quasipoloidally symmetric, compact stellarator configurations. These high-β(volume-average β>4%) free-boundary equilibria are calculated using a reference Quasi-Poloidal Stellarator (QPS) configuration. QPS plasmas have low-shear, stellarator-like rotational transform profile with |B| that is approximately poloidally symmetric. The high-β QPS equilibria are similar in their magnetic configuration to previously studied tokamak-stellarator hybrids which have a high-shear, tokamak-like rotational transform profile. Both types of configurations have strong magnetic wells and consequently high interchange stability β limits. Free-boundary QPS equilibria have regions of second stability at high β. For infinite-n ballooning modes in QPS plasmas, the boundary for first instability is 〈b〉∼2% and the boundary for second stability is 〈bβ∼6%. Finite-n ballooning mode calculations show higher β limits, 〈b〉>5%. Increasing plasma current (for fixed plasma pressure) can lower the finite-n ballooning mode β-limit to 〈b〉=3% by reducing magnetic shear. QPS plasmas with Ohmic current profiles (peaked on-axis) have both a lower infinite-n ballooning β-limit for the onset of first instability and a higher β-limit for the onset of second stability relative to QPS plasma with bootstrap current profiles (peaked off-axis). QPS plasmas are stable to low-n ideal magnetohydrodynamic kink modes and vertical modes for values of β in this range (〈β〉∼6%) due to the low level of plasma current in QPS relative to an equivalent tokamak. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1070664X
Volume :
11
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Physics of Plasmas
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
12952634
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1651101