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Helium transport and exhaust studies in enhanced confinement regimes in DIII‐D

Authors :
M.A. Mahdavi
M. R. Wade
R.M. Hong
R. Seraydarian
D. H. Kellman
J.T. Hogan
W.P. West
J. C. Phillips
M. M. Menon
K. H. Burrell
P. Gohil
D. L. Hillis
R. Maingi
D.F. Finkenthal
R. J. Groebner
Source :
Physics of Plasmas. 2:2357-2365
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 1995.

Abstract

A better understanding of helium transport in the plasma core and edge in enhanced confinement regimes is now emerging from recent experimental studies on DIII-D. Overall, the results are encouraging. Significant helium exhaust ({tau}*{sub He}/{tau}{sub E} {approximately} 11) has been obtained in a diverted, ELMing H-mode plasma simultaneous with a central source of helium. Detailed analysis of the helium profile evolution indicates that the exhaust rate is limited by the exhaust efficiency of the pump ({approximately}5%) and not by the intrinsic helium transport properties of the plasma. Perturbative helium transport studies using gas puffing have shown that D{sub He}/X{sub eff}{approximately}1 in all confinement regimes studied to date (including H-mode and VH-mode). Furthermore, there is no evidence of preferential accumulation of helium in any of these regimes. However, measurements in the core and pumping plenum show a significant dilution of helium as it flows from the plasma core to the pumping plenum. Such dilution could be the limiting factor in the overall removal rate of helium in a reactor system.

Details

ISSN :
10897674 and 1070664X
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics of Plasmas
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........fb97f8ec16c4c19b1b1b17e0041522a3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.871489