Bulletin of the American Physical Society
60th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 63, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 5–9, 2018; Portland, Oregon
Session BO5: DIII-D Tokamak
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Monday, November 5, 2018
OCC
Room: B113-114
Chair: Walter Guttenfelder, PPPL
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DPP.BO5.6
Abstract: BO5.00006 : High Performance Core-Edge Solutions in Super H-Mode*
10:30 AM–10:42 AM
Presenter:
Philip B Snyder
(General Atomics)
Authors:
Philip B Snyder
(General Atomics)
Tom Osborne
(General Atomics)
Carlos Paz-Soldan
(General Atomics)
Wayne M Solomon
(General Atomics)
David Eldon
(General Atomics)
Todd E Evans
(General Atomics)
Brian A Grierson
(Princeton Plasma Phys Lab)
Richard Groebner
(General Atomics)
Jerry W Hughes
(MIT)
Matthias Knolker
(Ludwig Maximilians Univ)
Florian Laggner
(Princeton Univ)
Anthony W Leonard
(General Atomics)
Orso Meneghini
(General Atomics)
Saskia Mordijck
(William & Mary Coll)
Thomas Petrie
(General Atomics)
Huiqian Wang
(General Atomics)
Jonathan Watkins
(Sandia National Lab)
Howard R Wilson
(Univ of York, CCFE)
The Super H-Mode (SH) regime is predicted to enable pedestal height and fusion performance substantially higher than standard H-mode operation. This regime exists due to a bifurcation of the pedestal pressure as a function of density, predicted by the EPED model to occur in strongly shaped plasmas above a critical density. The SH regime can have pedestal pressure twice as high, and collisionality 4x lower, than the standard H-mode at the same density. Because the pedestal in SH mode is limited by current-driven modes, increasing the near separatrix density to enable attractive divertor solutions is predicted to be compatible with high fusion performance in the core (unlike in standard H-modes). DIII-D SH experiments have achieved record levels of fusion gain on a medium scale tokamak, and have sustained high performance using 3D magnetic perturbations. New experiments have employed D2 and N2 gas to improve divertor conditions. High pedestal pressure (>20kPa) and core confinement (τE~.15s) are sustained across a 30x gas scan, and with a strongly radiating divertor with a 3x reduction in divertor Te. We discuss DIII-D results, and further predictions for DIII-D and ITER.
*Supported by US DOE under DE‑FG03‑95ER54309, DE-FC02-06ER54873, DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-SC0014264.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DPP.BO5.6
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