50th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 53, Number 14
Monday–Friday, November 17–21, 2008;
Dallas, Texas
Session CI1: Magnetic Confinement I
2:00 PM–5:00 PM,
Monday, November 17, 2008
Room: Landmark A
Chair: Piero Martin, Consorzio RFX - Associazione EURATOM-ENEA sulla fusione, Padova (Italy)
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.DPP.CI1.6
Abstract: CI1.00006 : Improved Confinement During Magnetic Levitation in LDX*
4:30 PM–5:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
M.E. Mauel
(Columbia University)
We report improved particle confinement in the Levitated Dipole
Experiment (\urllink{LDX}{http://www.psfc.mit.edu/ldx/}) when the
high-field superconducting dipole is magnetically levitated. Magnet
levitation eliminates power and particle losses to mechanical
supports and causes radial transport processes to determine the
profiles of the confined plasma. Initial LDX experiments used
multiple-frequency electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH) to
produce quasi-stationary discharges with stable high-beta energetic
trapped electrons when the superconducting dipole was mechanically
supported\footnote{D. T. Garnier, et al., Phys. Plasmas
\textbf{13},
056111 (2006).}. When the mechanical supports are fully retracted
and the dipole is magnetically levitated, the pressure
increases and
becomes more isotropic, and the plasma density is seen to increase
by 2 to 5 as compared with supported operation. Variations of the
microwave heating power, power deposition locations, and neutral
fueling rates are used to investigate plasma confinement and
profile
evolution. Density profile measurements were obtained with a
multi-chord interferometer, and under certain circumstances these
show a rearrangement of the density profile that results in a
highly
peaked profile with equal number of particles per flux tube. Such a
density profile is the expected stationary state that accompanies
the strongly peaked pressure profiles of active magnetospheres and
is also the very favorable, centrally peaked profile required for
fusion applications. Low frequency fluctuations are seen during
rapid profile evolution, but the fluctuations are reduced during
this stationary state. Finally, we report excellent technical
operation\footnote{D. T. Garnier, et al., Fusion Eng and Design
\textbf{81}, 2371 (2006).} as evidenced by (1) accurate position
control of the levitated dipole magnet, and (2) the enhanced float
time and reduced cryostat warming during magnetic levitation.
*Supported by US DOE Grants: DE-FG02-98ER54458/9.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.DPP.CI1.6