Initial characterization of electron temperature and density profiles in PEGASUS spherical tokamak discharges driven solely by local helicity injection

PHYSICS OF PLASMAS(2021)

引用 1|浏览25
暂无评分
摘要
Local helicity injection (LHI) is a non-solenoidal startup technique that utilizes electron current injectors at the plasma edge to initiate tokamak discharges. Viable non-solenoidal startup techniques require high central T-e to combat resistive losses and enhance coupling to auxiliary methods of current drive/heating. Thomson scattering measurements of LHI discharges in Pegasus showed peaked T-e profiles at I-p similar to 0.15 MA and B-t similar to 0.15 T with T-e,T-0 similar to 100- 150 eV. These results are similar to T-e profiles observed with Ohmic induction. At lower levels of B-t, LHI T-e profiles were hollow with T-e,T-0 similar to 40 eV and T-e,T-max <= 120 eV depending upon the helicity input. Regardless of the B-t level and helicity input, the electron pressure profiles were flat/peaked with hollow J R profiles. Equilibrium reconstructions and measurements of core absolute extreme ultraviolet radiation suggest the hollow T-e profiles are a result of very low resistive heating power in the core due to the edge-localized nature of LHI and low-Z line radiation losses. Estimates of Z(eff) from the plasma conductivity indicate averaged values of similar to 1 or similar to 3 assuming neoclassical or Spitzer conductivity, respectively. When auxiliary heating power from magnetic reconnection is considered, this observed LHI performance is comparable to expectations from a linear Ohmic confinement scaling estimate and a collisional stochastic confinement scaling estimate of the core plasma region.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要