55th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 58, Number 16
Monday–Friday, November 11–15, 2013;
Denver, Colorado
Session AR1: Review: Twenty Years of Research on the Alcator C-Mod Tokamak
8:00 AM–9:00 AM,
Monday, November 11, 2013
Room: Grand Ballroom
Chair: Riccardo Betti, University of Rochester
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.DPP.AR1.1
Abstract: AR1.00001 : Twenty Years of Research on the Alcator C-Mod Tokamak*
8:00 AM–9:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Martin Greenwald
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Alcator C-Mod is a compact, high-field tokamak, whose unique design and
operating parameters have produced a wealth of new and important results
since its start in 1993, contributing data that extended tests of critical
physical models into new parameter ranges and into new regimes. Using only
RF for heating and current drive with innovative launching structures, C-Mod
operates routinely at very high power densities. Research highlights include
direct experimental observation of ICRF mode-conversion, ICRF flow drive,
demonstration of Lower-Hybrid current drive at ITER-like densities and
fields and, using a set of powerful new diagnostics, extensive validation of
advanced RF codes. C-Mod spearheaded the development of the vertical-target
divertor and has always operated with high-Z metal plasma facing components
- an approach adopted for ITER. C-Mod has made ground-breaking discoveries
in divertor physics and plasma-material interactions at reactor-like power
and particle fluxes and elucidated the critical role of cross-field
transport in divertor operation, edge flows and the tokamak density limit.
C-Mod developed the I-mode and EDA H-mode regimes which have high
performance without large ELMs and with pedestal transport self-regulated by
short-wavelength electromagnetic waves. C-Mod has carried out pioneering
studies of intrinsic rotation and found that self-generated flow shear can
be strong enough to significantly modify transport. C-Mod made the first
quantitative link between pedestal temperature and H-mode performance,
showing that the observed self-similar temperature profiles were consistent
with critical-gradient-length theories and followed up with quantitative
tests of nonlinear gyrokinetic models. Disruption studies on C-Mod provided
the first observation of non-axisymmetric halo currents and non-axisymmetric
radiation in mitigated disruptions.
*Work supported by U.S. DoE
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.DPP.AR1.1