Transport, stability and plasma control studies in the TJ-II stellarator
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29/07/2015Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
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The main TJ-II results since 2012 are presented in this overview. Impurity confinement is studied showing an isotopic dependence
of impurity confinement time, asymmetries in parallel impurity flows in TJ-II ion-root plasmas and impurity density asymmetries
within a flux surface. In addition, first observations of electrostatic potential variations within the same magnetic flux surface
are presented. Evidence of the impact of three-dimensional magnetic structures on plasma confinement and L H transitions is
also presented. The leading role of the plasma turbulence is emphasized by the observed temporal ordering of the limit cycle
oscillations at the L I H transition. Comparative studies between tokamaks and stellarators have provided direct experimental
evidence for the importance of multi-scale physics to unravel the impact of the isotope effect on transport. Novel solutions
for plasma facing components based on the recently installed Li-liquid limiters (LLLs) have been developed on TJ-II, showing
the self-screening effect of evaporating liquid lithium, protecting plasma-facing components against heat loads, and tritium
inventory control. Regarding plasma stability, magnetic well scan experiments show that traditional stability criteria, on which the optimization of stellarator configurations is based, may miss some stabilization mechanisms. Further effects of ECRH on
Alfvénic instabilities are investigated, showing that moderate off-axis ECH power deposition modifies the continuous nature of
the Alfvén eigenmodes, and frequency chirping sets in. This result shows that ECH can be a tool for AE control that might be
ITER and reactor-relevant. The main TJ-II results since 2012 are presented in this overview. Impurity confinement is studied showing an isotopic dependence
of impurity confinement time, asymmetries in parallel impurity flows in TJ-II ion-root plasmas and impurity density asymmetries
within a flux surface. In addition, first observations of electrostatic potential variations within the same magnetic flux surface
are presented. Evidence of the impact of three-dimensional magnetic structures on plasma confinement and L H transitions is
also presented. The leading role of the plasma turbulence is emphasized by the observed temporal ordering of the limit cycle
oscillations at the L I H transition. Comparative studies between tokamaks and stellarators have provided direct experimental
evidence for the importance of multi-scale physics to unravel the impact of the isotope effect on transport. Novel solutions
for plasma facing components based on the recently installed Li-liquid limiters (LLLs) have been developed on TJ-II, showing
the self-screening effect of evaporating liquid lithium, protecting plasma-facing components against heat loads, and tritium
inventory control. Regarding plasma stability, magnetic well scan experiments show that traditional stability criteria, on which the optimization of stellarator configurations is based, may miss some stabilization mechanisms. Further effects of ECRH on
Alfvénic instabilities are investigated, showing that moderate off-axis ECH power deposition modifies the continuous nature of
the Alfvén eigenmodes, and frequency chirping sets in. This result shows that ECH can be a tool for AE control that might be
ITER and reactor-relevant.
Transport, stability and plasma control studies in the TJ-II stellarator
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
0029-5515Palabras Clave
Transporte, estabilidad, controlTransport, stability, control