Filters
Results 1 - 1 of 1
Results 1 - 1 of 1.
Search took: 0.017 seconds
McClenaghan, J.; Garofalo, A.M.; Lao, L.L.; Weisberg, D.B.; Meneghini, O.; Smith, S.P.; Lyons, B.C.; Staebler, G.M.; Ding, S.Y.; Huang, J.; Gong, X.; Qian, J.; Ren, Q.; Holcomb, C.T., E-mail: mcclenaghanj@fusion.gat.com2020
AbstractAbstract
[en] On DIII-D, the high scenario has an internal transport barrier (ITB), , , and very high normalized confinement . Recently, plasmas starting with these conditions have been dynamically driven to and , where we find the ITB and high performance persist for five energy confinement times. These conditions are projected to meet the ITER steady-state goal of Q = 5. The ITB is maintained at lower with a strong reverse shear, consistent with predictions that negative central shear can lower the threshold for the ITB. There are two observed confinement states in the high scenario: H-mode confinement state with a high edge pedestal, and an enhanced confinement state with a low pedestal and an ITB. It has been observed in a scan of external resonant magnetic perturbation amplitude that when there are no large type-I ELMs, there is no transition to enhanced confinement. This is consistent with the proposed mechanism for ITB formation being a type-I ELM. Quasilinear gyro-Landau fluid predictive modeling of ITER suggests that only a modest reverse shear is required to achieve the ITB formation necessary for Q = 5 when electromagnetic physics including the kinetic ballooning mode (KBM) is incorporated. (paper)
Primary Subject
Source
Available from http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1741-4326/ab74a0; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue