2006 48th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2006;
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Session VI2: MHD
2:00 PM–5:00 PM,
Thursday, November 2, 2006
Philadelphia Marriott Downtown
Room: Grand Salon CDE
Chair: Darren Craig, Wheaton College
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.DPP.VI2.2
Abstract: VI2.00002 : Feedback Stabilization of Resistive Wall Modes in RFX-mod
2:30 PM–3:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Tommaso Bolzonella
(Consorzio RFX, Italy)
The search of efficient strategies for active control of MHD
instabilities is one of the main missions of existing devices
and one active field of research where important contributions
can come not only from tokamak devices but also from alternative
configurations.
Resistive Wall Mode (RWM) instabilities are known in particular
to limit plasma performances in all toroidal devices with plasma
duration exceeding the penetration time of the resistive
magnetic boundary surrounding the plasma. RWMs are the main
limit for tokamak high-beta advanced scenarios, where a high
fraction of non-inductive current is requested to study long (in
the limit steady state) operations.
Historically RWMs were first observed in Reversed Field Pinch
(RFP) devices, where the current gradient plays the role of the
drive, typically with multi-mode spectrum whose composition
depends on magnetic equilibrium field profiles.
RFX-mod device is a large RFP (R=2 m, a=0.46 m) where active
control of MHD instabilities is intensively studied by means of
a system of 192 active saddle coils placed outside the resistive
shell (50 ms for Bv diffusion time) fully covering its external
surface and driven by a digital controller. This system provides
a very powerful and flexible environment where the study of RWMs
physics and their active stabilisation under different
experimental conditions is possible.
Recent results from RFX-mod show that the complete stabilisation
of multi-mode RWM spectrum at high plasma currents (Ip=1 MA) is
possible allowing discharges longer than 6 times the diffusion
time of the shell. Different control schemes are tested as well,
such as open loop operations (intrinsic error field correction
and Resonant Field Amplification studies), feedback operations
using different measurement systems or incomplete set of coils
to simulate systems with partial coverage by active coils.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.DPP.VI2.2