A. A. Letunov
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by A. A. Letunov.
Nuclear Fusion | 1997
V.V. Abrakov; D. K. Akulina; E.D. Andryukhina; G. M. Batanov; M.S. Berezhetskij; I. S. Danilkin; N. P. Donskaya; O. I. Fedyanin; G. A. Gladkov; S. E. Grebenshchikov; J.H. Harris; N. K. Kharchev; Yu. V. Kholnov; L. V. Kolik; L. M. Kovrizhnykh; N. F. Larionova; A. A. Letunov; K.M. Likin; J.F. Lyon; A. I. Meshcheryakov; Yu.I. Nechaev; A. E. Petrov; K. A. Sarksyan; I.S. Sbitnikova
The results of electron cyclotron heating (ECH) experiments in the L-2M stellarator are presented. The main goal of the experiments is to investigate the physics of ECH and of plasma confinement at high values of the volume heating power density. A current free plasma is produced and heated by extraordinary waves at the second harmonic of the electron cyclotron frequency ( omega 0=2 omega ce). The experimental results are compared with the empirical LHD scaling and with numerical simulations of plasma confinement and heating processes based on neoclassical theory using the full matrix of transport coefficients, including some additional anomalous corrections
Jetp Letters | 1997
G. M. Batanov; V. A. Ivanov; M. E. Konyzhev; A. A. Letunov
A new phenomenon — intense luminescence of noncolored lithium fluoride (LiF) crystals excited by an electrodeless pulsed microwave discharge at the prebreakdown stage of development — is observed. This luminescence consists of the luminescence of short-lived aggregate F2 and F3+ color centers at room temperature. It is shown that the density of short-lived color centers induced in the surface layer of LiF crystals by a microsecond microwave discharge reaches values of ∼1019−1020 cm−3.
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2010
N. N. Skvortsova; D. K. Akulina; G. M. Batanov; N. K. Kharchev; L. V. Kolik; L. M. Kovrizhnykh; A. A. Letunov; V. P. Logvinenko; D. V. Malakhov; A. E. Petrov; A. A. Pshenichnikov; Karen A. Sarksyan; G. S. Voronov
This paper reports on studies of short-wave turbulence in the plasma of the L-2M stellarator under markedly different conditions: with doubling the ECR heating power (100 and 200 kW) and with restricting the plasma radius by a sector limiter. The role of such short-wave turbulence in anomalous transport can appear important for conditions of a thermonuclear reactor. Experiments were carried out in a basic magnetic configuration of the L-2M stellarator during ECRH at the second harmonic of the electron gyrofrequency (75.3 GHz) at average electron densities of (1.5–1.7) × 1013 cm−3. The energy confinement time was ~3.5 ms at P0 = 100 kW and was reduced to ~2 ms at P0 = 200 kW. When the limiter was introduced inside the plasma to a depth of 2 cm from the last closed flux surface, τE decreased by a factor of 1.3–1.4. Plasma density fluctuations were measured from the scattering of gyrotron radiation at the second harmonic of operating frequency (~150 GHz). A quasioptical receiving system allowed measurements of scattered radiation from plasma regions r/a ≤ 0.6 at scattering angles π/4 ≤ Θ ≤ π/2 (24 cm−1 ≤ k⊥ ≤ 44 cm−1). The short-wave turbulence was studied for two radial positions of the scattering region: r/a = 0.3–0.4 and r/a = 0.5–0.6. Short-wave turbulence exhibits features of strong plasma turbulence. It is experimentally established that a change in the energy confinement time in the L-2M stellarator correlates with the level of short-wave turbulence.
Plasma Physics Reports | 2005
A. I. Meshcheryakov; D. K. Akulina; G. M. Batanov; M. S. Berezhetskii; G. S. Voronov; G. A. Gladkov; S. E. Grebenshchikov; V. A. Grinchuk; I. A. Grishina; L. V. Kolik; N. F. Larionova; A. A. Letunov; V. P. Logvinenko; A. E. Petrov; A. A. Pshenichnikov; G. A. Ryabenko; K. A. Sarksyan; N. N. Skvortsova; O. I. Fedyanin; N. K. Kharchev; Yu. V. Khol’nov; V. M. Sharapov
After boronization of the vacuum chamber of the L-2M stellarator, radiative losses from ohmically and ECR heated plasmas were reduced by a factor of 3–4. Under these conditions, radiative losses in the ECRH regime comprise only 10–15% of the input microwave power. Some effects have been detected that were not observed previously: a substantial increase in the gradient of the electron temperature near the separatrix, a preferentially outward-directed radial turbulent particle flux (both throughout the discharge phase and from shot to shot), and a longer (by a factor of 2–3) duration of the plasma cooling phase.
Plasma Physics Reports | 2013
G. M. Batanov; N. K. Berezhetskaya; V. D. Borzosekov; L D Iskhakova; L. V. Kolik; E. M. Konchekov; A. A. Letunov; D. V. Malakhov; Filipp O. Milovich; Ekaterina A. Obraztsova; Elena D. Obraztsova; A. E. Petrov; K. A. Sarksyan; N. N. Skvortsova; V. D. Stepakhin; N. K. Kharchev
Synthesis of titanium diboride and boron nitride nano- and microcrystals by means of a pulsed microwave discharge in a mixture of Ti-B powders in a nitrogen atmosphere is considered. For this purpose, a new type of reactor with a free surface of the powder mixture was used. The reactor design permits free expansion of the reaction products into the reactor volume and their deposition on the reactor walls. Conditions for the synthesis of TiB2 and BN compounds were studied as functions of the energy input in the discharge, the powder component ratio, the rate of the nitrogen flow through the reactor, and the structure and phase composition of the compounds deposited on the reactor walls. The synthesis of boron nitride and titanium diboride in crystal structures is proven. An important role in the process of synthesis is played by the heating of the mixture due to the titanium diboride synthesis reaction, its behavior in the bulk of the reactor, and the titanium concentration in the powder mixture. It is also found that, as the number of discharges in the bulk of the reactor increases, a dust cloud forms. The luminescence of this cloud indicates that the initiated discharge proceeds not only on the powder surface and in the powder bulk, but also in the reactor volume.
Plasma Physics Reports | 2013
G. S. Voronov; M. S. Berezhetskii; Yu. F. Bondar; I. Yu. Vafin; D. G. Vasil’kov; E. V. Voronova; S. E. Grebenshchikov; I. A. Grishina; N. F. Larionova; A. A. Letunov; V. P. Logvinenko; A. I. Meshcheryakov; E. I. Pleshkov; Yu. V. Khol’nov; O. I. Fedyanin; V. A. Tsygankov; S. V. Shchepetov; V. A. Kurnaev; I. V. Vizgalov; V. A. Urusov; I. A. Sorokin; F. S. Podolyako; A. Antipenkov; R. Pearce; L. Worth
Results are presented from L-2M stellarator experiments on testing a possible method for detection of water microleakages in the cooling system of the first wall and vacuum chamber of ITER. The method consists in the spectroscopic detection of spectral lines of the OH hydroxyl, which forms via the dissociation of water molecules in plasma. Emission in the spectral band of 305–310 nm can be detected even at water leakage rates less than 10−4 Pa m3/s. Chemical reactions between water and boron compounds on the vacuum chamber wall delay the detection of leakages up to ∼2000 s. A similar phenomenon can be expected when a leakage will occur in ITER, where the materials suggested for the first wall (Be, Li) can also chemically react with water.
Plasma Physics Reports | 2008
D. K. Akulina; G. M. Batanov; M. S. Berezhetskiĭ; D. G. Vasil’kov; I. Yu. Vafin; G. S. Voronov; E. V. Voronova; G. A. Gladkov; S. E. Grebenshchikov; I. A. Grishina; A. V. Knyazev; L. M. Kovrizhnykh; L. V. Kolik; A. B. Kuznetsov; N. F. Larionova; A. A. Letunov; V. P. Logvinenko; N. I. Malykh; A. I. Meshcheryakov; Yu. I. Nechaev; A. E. Petrov; A. A. Pshenichnikov; V. V. Saenko; K. A. Sarksyan; N. N. Skvortsova; O. I. Fedyanin; N. K. Kharchev; Yu. V. Khol’nov; S. V. Shchepetov
Results are presented from experimental studies of variations in the plasma parameters during the excitation of a multiaxis magnetic configuration by the induction current (up to 17 kA) in the basic magnetic configuration of the L-2M stellarator in the regime of ECR heating at a microwave power of ∼200 kW (∼1 MW m−3) and an average plasma density of (1–2) × 1019 m−3. The current direction was chosen to reduce the net rotational transform (the so-called “negative“ current). The current was high enough for the rotational transform to change its sign inside the plasma column. Computer simulations of the L-2M magnetic structure showed that the surface with a zero rotational transform is topologically unstable and gives rise to magnetic islands, i.e., to a multiaxis magnetic configuration. Magnetic measurements showed that, at negative currents above 10 kA, intense bursts of MHD oscillations with a clearly defined toroidal mode number n = 0 were observed in the frequency range of several kilohertz. Unfortunately, the experimental data are insufficient to draw the final conclusion on the transverse structure of these oscillations. The radial temperature profiles along the stellarator major radius in the equatorial plane were studied. It is found that the electron temperature decreases by a factor of 1.3 in the plasma core (r/a ≤ 0.6) and that the temperature jump is retained near the boundary. A change in turbulent fluctuations of the plasma density during the excitation of a negative current was studied using wave scattering diagnostics. It is found that the probability density function of the increments of fluctuations in the plasma core differs from a Gaussian distribution. The measured distribution is heavy-tailed and broadens in the presence of the current. It is found that the spectrum of turbulent fluctuations and their Doppler shift near the plasma boundary are nonuniform in the radial direction. This may be attributed to the shear of the poloidal velocity. The experimental results indicate that the formation of regions with a zero rotational transform in the plasma core somewhat intensifies plasma transport.
Journal of Nanophotonics | 2016
G. M. Batanov; V. D. Borzosekov; Dmitri Golberg; L D Iskhakova; L. V. Kolik; E. M. Konchekov; Nikolai K. Kharchev; A. A. Letunov; D. V. Malakhov; Filipp O. Milovich; Ekaterina A. Obraztsova; A. E. Petrov; Irina G. Ryabikina; Karen A. Sarksian; V. D. Stepakhin; Nina N. Skvortsova
Abstract. We introduce an approach toward the synthesis of micro- and nanostructures under nonequilibrium microwave discharges within metal–dielectric powder mixtures induced by powerful microwave gyrotron radiation. A new plasma-chemical reactor capable of sustaining a discharge regime with an afterglow phase of an order of magnitude longer than the gyrotron pulse duration was constructed for these experiments. In the nonequilibrium conditions of such a discharge, plasma-induced exothermic chemical reactions leading to the synthesis of various compounds were initiated. The synthesized structures were deposited on the reactor walls and on the impurity particles within the reactor. This method was tested under gyrotron-initiated discharges within various metal–dielectric powder mixtures of titanium–boron, molybdenum–boron, titanium–silicon–boron, molybdenum–boron nitride, molybdenum–tungsten–boron nitride, and so on. Depending on the powder mixture composition, reactor atmosphere, and other parameters, micro- and nanosized particles of boron nitride, titanium diboride, molybdenum boride, titanium boride, molybdenum, and molybdenum oxide, were synthesized, detected, and analyzed.
Plasma Physics Reports | 2012
V. A. Ivanov; M. E. Konyzhev; L. I. Kuksenova; V. G. Lapteva; M. S. Alekseeva; I. A. Khrennikova; A. A. Letunov; A. S. Sakharov; T. I. Kamolova; A. A. Dorofeyuk; S. N. Satunin
The interaction of microplasma discharges with samples made of VT1 commercial titanium was studied experimentally. The amplitude of the current pulses of microplasma discharges was 200 A, the pulse duration was 20 ms, and the number of current pulses was from 1 to 10. After microplasma processing, a 10-μm-thick solid remelted surface layer with an increased hardness formed on the titanium samples. As compared to the initial state of titanium samples, the surface layer hardened by microplasma discharges possesses improved parameters: the microhardness increases fivefold, the maximum admissible pressure applied to the samples during friction increases more than 20-fold, the friction wear rate is reduced by three orders of magnitude, and the friction coefficient decreases sixfold.
Plasma Physics Reports | 2011
V. A. Ivanov; M. E. Konyzhev; L. I. Kuksenova; V. G. Lapteva; A. S. Sakharov; A. A. Dorofeyuk; T. I. Kamolova; S. N. Satunin; A. A. Letunov
Excitation of microplasma discharges on the surfaces of V95 aluminum alloy samples placed in a uniform pulsed plasma flow was studied experimentally. Strong localized interaction of microplasma discharges with aluminum leads to the melting and subsequent fast cooling of micrometer-size regions on the sample surface. Due to the multiple action of microplasma discharges, a continuous remelted layer with a thickness of up to 20 μm forms on the aluminum surface. The physical, structural, and tribotechnical properties of this layer differ substantially from those before microplasma processing.