2005 47th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 24–28, 2005;
Denver, Colorado
Session KI1: Turbulence and Transport: Experiment and Simulation
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
Adam's Mark Hotel
Room: Plaza Ballroom ABC
Chair: Charles Greenfield, General Atomics
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.DPP.KI1.3
Abstract: KI1.00003 : Neoclassical and Turbulent Transport in Shaped Toroidal plasmas
10:30 AM–11:00 AM
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Abstract
Author:
Weixing Wang
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
The nonlocal physics associated with turbulent and neoclassical
transport in tokamaks has been investigated. When using the global
neoclassical particle code GTC-Neo to realistically assess
the irreducible minimum level of transport in NSTX plasma, the
non-local effects in the collisional relaxation of the ions are
clearly observed when the ion orbit size is large compared to either
the plasma gradient scale length or the local minor radius.
This generally brings the simulated ion thermal transport closer to
the experimental measurements. When compared to the radial force
balance relation with the standard neoclassical poloidal flow, the
radial electric field from these simulations also shows significant
differences in the region of the internal transport barrier in
NSTX plasmas.
Applications of a new general geometry version of the GTC code for
gyrokinetic simulation of shaped plasmas have demonstrated that
ion temperature
gradient (ITG) driven turbulence, which grows initially in the
linearly unstable
region, spreads in both the inward and outward radial directions
into the stable
regions, leading to radially global turbulence and transport
nonlocality.
The global phenomenon of turbulence spreading appears quite generic,
independent of the presence of zonal flow. The zonal flow,
however, may
significantly change the nonlinear dynamics of the spreading process.
In the presence of self-generated zonal flow, an early spreading with
substantial
growth in turbulence intensity is observed before saturation of ITG
instability in the unstable region. The nonlinearly driven
turbulence in
the stable region grows even faster than the initial linear
instability.
The evolution of the turbulence spectra in both the linearly
unstable and
stable regions, and the associated nonlinear dynamics of energy
cascading
to the longer wavelength (low-n) modes, will be presented and
compared to a single-n nonlinear simulation.
Work collaborated with SciDAC GPS Center and NSTX Experiment, and
supported by
US Department of Energy.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.DPP.KI1.3