58th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 61, Number 18
Monday–Friday, October 31–November 4 2016;
San Jose, California
Session PI3: MFE: Turbulence & Transport I
2:00 PM–5:00 PM,
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
Room: 210 ABEF
Chair: George McKee, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Abstract ID: BAPS.2016.DPP.PI3.6
Abstract: PI3.00006 : Understanding and Predicting Profile Structure and Parametric Scaling of Intrinsic Rotation*
4:30 PM–5:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Weixing Wang
(Princeton University Plasma Physics Lab)
It is shown for the first time that turbulence-driven residual Reynolds
stress can account for both the shape and magnitude of the observed
intrinsic toroidal rotation profile. Nonlinear, global gyrokinetic
simulations using GTS of DIII-D ECH plasmas indicate a substantial ITG
fluctuation-induced non-diffusive momentum flux generated around a
mid-radius-peaked intrinsic toroidal rotation profile. The non-diffusive
momentum flux is dominated by the residual stress with a negligible
contribution from the momentum pinch. The residual stress profile shows a
robust anti-gradient, dipole structure in a set of ECH discharges with
varying ECH power. Such interesting features of non-diffusive momentum
fluxes, in connection with edge momentum sources and sinks, are found to be
critical to drive the non-monotonic core rotation profiles in the
experiments. Both turbulence intensity gradient and zonal flow ExB shear are
identified as major contributors to the generation of the
k$_{\mathrm{\parallel }}$-asymmetry needed for the residual stress
generation. By balancing the residual stress and the momentum diffusion, a
self-organized, steady-state rotation profile is calculated. The predicted
core rotation profiles agree well with the experimentally measured main-ion
toroidal rotation. The validated model is further used to investigate the
characteristic dependence of global rotation profile structure in the
multi-dimensional parametric space covering turbulence type, q-profile
structure and collisionality with the goal of developing physics
understanding needed for rotation profile control and optimization.
Interesting results obtained include intrinsic rotation reversal induced by
ITG-TEM transition in flat-q profile regime and by change in q-profile from
weak to normal shear.. Fluctuation-generated poloidal Reynolds stress is
also shown to significantly modify the neoclassical poloidal rotation in a
way consistent with experimental observations. Finally, the
first-principles-based model is applied to studying the $\rho \ast
$-scaling and predicting rotations in ITER regime.
*Work supported by U.S. DOE Contract DE-AC02-09-CH11466.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2016.DPP.PI3.6