Bulletin of the American Physical Society
66th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 7–11, 2024; Atlanta, Georgia
Session NI02: Invited: Rosenbluth Award and MFE IV - Stellarators
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
Hyatt Regency
Room: Centennial III
Chair: Matt Landreman, University of Maryland College Park
Abstract: NI02.00002 : Recent Experimental and Modeling Results from the HSX Stellarator*
10:00 AM–10:30 AM
Presenter:
Alexis Renee Wolfmeister
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Authors:
Alexis Renee Wolfmeister
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Benjamin J Faber
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Benedikt Geiger
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Dieter Boeyaert
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Dionysi Damaskopoulos
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Michael Jeffrey Gerard
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Wayne Goodman
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Xiang Han
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Henrique Oliveira Miller Hillebrecht
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Celine Lu
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Silvia Peiro
(University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Michael James Richardson
(University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Luquant Singh
(University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Alexander LF Thornton
(University of Wisconsin - Madison)
Collaboration:
the HSX Team
Excellent plasma performance has been achieved following an intensive first wall reset, which involved removing coatings deposited on the plasma facing stainless steel wall, combined with a new vessel baking system and extensive glow discharge cleaning. The resulting reduction in impurity content has driven substantial improvements in plasma profiles, including core electron temperatures well above 2 keV and higher overall energy confinement.
During studies with different main-ion species, more pronounced pressure profile peaking has been measured in hydrogen fueled plasmas than with helium fueling. This is consistent with non-linear GENE [4] simulations which predict reduced turbulent heat fluxes in hydrogen plasmas. Although previous work suggested the strong electron temperature peaking observed in the core of HSX is a result of turbulent suppression by ExB flow shear, recent analysis of correlation ECE measurements have shown increased radiation temperature fluctuations in regions with high electron temperature gradients. These measurements show qualitative agreement with non-linear gyrokinetic flux tube simulations with GENE.
[1] A. Briesemeister et al., 2010 Contrib. Plasma Phys. 50 8
[2] J. Canik et al., 2007 Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 8
[3] W. Guttenfelder et al., 2008 Phys. Rev. Lett. 101 21
[4] F. Jenko et al., 2000 Phys. Plasmas 7 1904
[5] M.J. Gerard et al., 2023 Nucl. Fusion 63 056004
*Work supported by US DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-93ER54222
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