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Transport at high and development of candidate steady state scenarios for ITER.

Authors :
J. McClenaghan
A.M. Garofalo
L.L. Lao
D.B. Weisberg
O. Meneghini
S.P. Smith
B.C. Lyons
G.M. Staebler
S.Y. Ding
J. Huang
X. Gong
J. Qian
Q. Ren
C.T. Holcomb
Source :
Nuclear Fusion; Apr2020, Vol. 60 Issue 4, p1-1, 1p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

On DIII-D, the high scenario has an internal transport barrier (ITB), , , and very high normalized confinement . Recently, plasmas starting with these conditions have been dynamically driven to and , where we find the ITB and high performance persist for five energy confinement times. These conditions are projected to meet the ITER steady-state goal of Q  =  5. The ITB is maintained at lower with a strong reverse shear, consistent with predictions that negative central shear can lower the threshold for the ITB. There are two observed confinement states in the high scenario: H-mode confinement state with a high edge pedestal, and an enhanced confinement state with a low pedestal and an ITB. It has been observed in a scan of external resonant magnetic perturbation amplitude that when there are no large type-I ELMs, there is no transition to enhanced confinement. This is consistent with the proposed mechanism for ITB formation being a type-I ELM. Quasilinear gyro-Landau fluid predictive modeling of ITER suggests that only a modest reverse shear is required to achieve the ITB formation necessary for Q  =  5 when electromagnetic physics including the kinetic ballooning mode (KBM) is incorporated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00295515
Volume :
60
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nuclear Fusion
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142309439
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-4326/ab74a0