2006 48th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2006;
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Session NI1: Plasma Edge and Divertor
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Wednesday, November 1, 2006
Philadelphia Marriott Downtown
Room: Grand Salon ABF
Chair: Steve Allen, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.DPP.NI1.1
Abstract: NI1.00001 : Superdense Plasma in LHD
9:30 AM–10:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Tomohiro Morisaki
(National Institute for Fusion Science)
In reduced recycling discharges using a Local Island Divertor
(LID) in the
Large Helical Device (LHD), a stable superdense plasma develops
spontaneously when a series of pellets are injected. A core
region with
$\sim $ 4.5 x 10$^{20}$ m$^{-3 }$and temperature of 0.85 keV is
maintained
by an Internal Diffusion Barrier (IDB). The density gradient at
the IDB (r/a
$\sim $ 0.6) is very high, and the particle confinement time in
the core
region is $\sim $ 300 ms. The temperature profile inside the IDB
(r/a $<$
0.6) is flat, on the other hand, its gradient in the outer region
is steep.
Because of the increase in the central pressure, a large,
stabilizing
Shafranov shift up to $\sim $ 0.3 m is observed. The critical
ingredients
for IDB formation are a strongly pumped divertor to reduce edge
recycling,
and multiple pellet injection to ensure strong central fueling.
Gas puffing
results in broad, flat or slightly inverted density profiles, and
does not
lead to formation of a superdense plasma. Low density in the
outer region
helps to raise the edge temperature gradient there and hence the
core
temperature. In that sense, for the strong pumping, it does not
take an LID
to reduce the edge recycling, only if a conventional Helical
Divertor (HD)
has sufficient pumping capability. Similar discharges can
actually be
achieved in the HD configuration under exhaustive wall conditioning,
although it cannot last for a long time because of the saturation
of the
pumping capability of the wall.
Although use of the island divertor reduces the confinement
volume by $\sim
$40 {\%} from its nominal value, superdense LID discharges
exhibit the
highest performance (n$_{0}$T$_{0}\tau _{E}$ = 4.4 $\times $ 10$^{19
}$m$^{-3}\cdot $keV$\cdot $s) obtained so far in LHD. These plasmas
provide unique opportunities for exploration of high-beta MHD
stability in
heliotron/stellarator configurations, and may extrapolate to a novel
scenario for fusion ignition at very high density and relatively low
temperature.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.DPP.NI1.1