62nd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 65, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 9–13, 2020;
Remote; Time Zone: Central Standard Time, USA
Session VI01: Invited: ICF Capsule Impacts and MFE
2:00 PM–5:00 PM,
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Chair: Brian MacGowan, LLNL
Abstract: VI01.00005 : Understanding energy confinement in Wendelstein 7-X
4:00 PM–4:30 PM
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Abstract
Author:
Per Helander
(Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics)
The W7-X stellarator has been optimized for low neoclassical transport and
has achieved confinement times exceeding 200 ms at high densities and
temperatures well above 3 keV in pellet-fuelled plasmas. Neoclassical
transport calculations indicate that similar density and temperature
profiles could not have been attained in less optimized magnetic
configurations of W7-X or other stellarators scaled to the same volume and
magnetic field strength, since the neoclassical energy flux would then have
exceeded the total heating power.
The magnetic geometry also serves to limit the turbulent transport. Unlike
in tokamaks, trapped particles need not be localized to regions of bad
curvature, which reduces the drive for trapped-electron modes. Ion- and
electron-temperature-gradient-driven (ITG/ETG) modes remain, but can be
stabilized by the density gradient that results from pellet injection. This
theoretical expectation is a likely explanation for the improved confinement
in plasmas with pellets, and is supported by gyrokinetic simulations. An
increased radial electric field may also help to suppress turbulence under
these circumstances.
In electron-cyclotron-resonance-heated plasmas without pellets, turbulent
transport is strong enough to limit the ion temperature to values below 2
keV. Recent gyrokinetic simulations suggest that this limitation is due to
strong ITG turbulence when the electron-to-ion temperature ratio becomes
large. With the addition of more heating power, higher-density operation is
likely to lead to higher ion temperatures.
The fact that turbulent transport can be reduced by tailoring the
magnetic-field geometry in ways that are understood theoretically is
encouraging and suggests that additional optimization could further improve
confinement in stellarators.