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Dive into the research topics where A. M. Brett is active.

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Featured researches published by A. M. Brett.


Nuclear Fusion | 2012

Integration of a radiative divertor for heat load control into JET high triangularity ELMy H-mode plasmas

C. Giroud; G. Maddison; K. McCormick; M. N. A. Beurskens; S. Brezinsek; S. Devaux; T. Eich; L. Frassinetti; W. Fundamenski; M. Groth; A. Huber; S. Jachmich; A. Järvinen; A. Kallenbach; K. Krieger; D. Moulton; S. Saarelma; H. Thomsen; S. Wiesen; A. Alonso; B. Alper; G. Arnoux; P. Belo; A. Boboc; A. M. Brett; M. Brix; I. Coffey; E. de la Luna; D. Dodt; P. de Vries

Experiments on JET with a carbon-fibre composite wall have explored the reduction of steady-state power load in an ELMy H-mode scenario at high Greenwald fraction similar to 0.8, constant power and close to the L to H transition. This paper reports a systematic study of power load reduction due to the effect of fuelling in combination with seeding over a wide range of pedestal density ((4-8) x 10(19) m(-3)) with detailed documentation of divertor, pedestal and main plasma conditions, as well as a comparative study of two extrinsic impurity nitrogen and neon. It also reports the impact of steady-state power load reduction on the overall plasma behaviour, as well as possible control parameters to increase fuel purity. Conditions from attached to fully detached divertor were obtained during this study. These experiments provide reference plasmas for comparison with a future JET Be first wall and an all W divertor where the power load reduction is mandatory for operation.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2012

Minority and mode conversion heating in (3He)–H JET plasmas

D. Van Eester; E. Lerche; Thomas Johnson; Torbjörn Hellsten; J. Ongena; M.-L. Mayoral; D. Frigione; C. Sozzi; G. Calabrò; M. Lennholm; P. Beaumont; T. Blackman; D. Brennan; A. M. Brett; Marco Cecconello; I. Coffey; A. Coyne; Kristel Crombé; A. Czarnecka; R. Felton; M. Gatu Johnson; C. Giroud; G. Gorini; C. Hellesen; P. Jacquet; Ye. O. Kazakov; V. Kiptily; S. Knipe; A. V. Krasilnikov; Y. Lin

Radio frequency (RF) heating experiments have recently been conducted in JET (He-3)-H plasmas. This type of plasmas will be used in ITERs non-activated operation phase. Whereas a companion paper in this same PPCF issue will discuss the RF heating scenarios at half the nominal magnetic field, this paper documents the heating performance in (He-3)-H plasmas at full field, with fundamental cyclotron heating of He-3 as the only possible ion heating scheme in view of the foreseen ITER antenna frequency bandwidth. Dominant electron heating with global heating efficiencies between 30% and 70% depending on the He-3 concentration were observed and mode conversion (MC) heating proved to be as efficient as He-3 minority heating. The unwanted presence of both He-4 and D in the discharges gave rise to 2 MC layers rather than a single one. This together with the fact that the location of the high-field side fast wave (FW) cutoff is a sensitive function of the parallel wave number and that one of the locations of the wave confluences critically depends on the He-3 concentration made the interpretation of the results, although more complex, very interesting: three regimes could be distinguished as a function of X[He-3]: (i) a regime at low concentration (X[He-3] < 1.8%) at which ion cyclotron resonance frequency (ICRF) heating is efficient, (ii) a regime at intermediate concentrations (1.8 < X[He-3] < 5%) in which the RF performance is degrading and ultimately becoming very poor, and finally (iii) a good heating regime at He-3 concentrations beyond 6%. In this latter regime, the heating efficiency did not critically depend on the actual concentration while at lower concentrations (X[He-3] < 4%) a bigger excursion in heating efficiency is observed and the estimates differ somewhat from shot to shot, also depending on whether local or global signals are chosen for the analysis. The different dynamics at the various concentrations can be traced back to the presence of 2 MC layers and their associated FW cutoffs residing inside the plasma at low He-3 concentration. One of these layers is approaching and crossing the low-field side plasma edge when 1.8 < X[He-3] < 5%. Adopting a minimization procedure to correlate the MC positions with the plasma composition reveals that the different behaviors observed are due to contamination of the plasma. Wave modeling not only supports this interpretation but also shows that moderate concentrations of D-like species significantly alter the overall wave behavior in He-3-H plasmas. Whereas numerical modeling yields quantitative information on the heating efficiency, analytical work gives a good description of the dominant underlying wave interaction physics.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2011

Optimizing ion-cyclotron resonance frequency heating for ITER: dedicated JET experiments

E. Lerche; D. Van Eester; J. Ongena; M.-L. Mayoral; Martin Laxåback; F. Rimini; A. Argouarch; P. Beaumont; T. Blackman; V. Bobkov; D. Brennan; A. M. Brett; G. Calabrò; Marco Cecconello; I. Coffey; L Colas; A. Coyne; Kristel Crombé; A. Czarnecka; R. Dumont; F. Durodié; R. Felton; D. Frigione; M. Gatu Johnson; C. Giroud; G. Gorini; M. Graham; C. Hellesen; Torbjörn Hellsten; S. Huygen

In the past years, one of the focal points of the JET experimental programme was on ion-cyclotron resonance heating (ICRH) studies in view of the design and exploitation of the ICRH system being developed for ITER. In this brief review, some of the main achievements obtained in JET in this field during the last 5 years will be summarized. The results reported here include important aspects of a more engineering nature, such as (i) the appropriate design of the RF feeding circuits for optimal load resilient operation and (ii) the test of a compact high-power density antenna array, as well as RF physics oriented studies aiming at refining the numerical models used for predicting the performance of the ICRH system in ITER. The latter include (i) experiments designed for improving the modelling of the antenna coupling resistance under various plasma conditions and (ii) the assessment of the heating performance of ICRH scenarios to be used in the non-active operation phase of ITER.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2012

Experimental investigation of ion cyclotron range of frequencies heating scenarios for ITER's half-field hydrogen phase performed in JET

E. Lerche; D. Van Eester; Thomas Johnson; Torbjörn Hellsten; J. Ongena; M.-L. Mayoral; D. Frigione; C. Sozzi; G. Calabrò; M. Lennholm; P. Beaumont; T. Blackman; D. Brennan; A. M. Brett; Marco Cecconello; I. Coffey; A. Coyne; K. Crombé; A. Czarnecka; R. Felton; C. Giroud; G. Gorini; C. Hellesen; P. Jacquet; V. Kiptily; S. Knipe; A. Krasilnikov; M. Maslov; I. Monakhov; C. Noble

Two ion cyclotron range of frequencies ( ICRF) heating schemes proposed for the half-field operation phase of ITER in hydrogen plasmas-fundamental H majority and second harmonic He-3 ICRF heating-were recently investigated in JET. Although the same magnetic field and RF frequencies (f approximate to 42 MHz and f approximate to 52 MHz, respectively) were used, the density and particularly the plasma temperature were lower than those expected in the initial phase of ITER. Unlike for the well-performing H minority heating scheme to be used in He-4 plasmas, modest heating efficiencies (n = P-absorbed/P-launched < 40%) with dominant electron heating were found in both H plasma scenarios studied, and enhanced plasma-wall interaction manifested by high radiation losses and relatively large impurity content in the plasma was observed. This effect was stronger in the He-3 ICRF heating case than in the H majority heating experiments and it was verified that concentrations as high as similar to 20% are necessary to observe significant ion heating in this case. The RF acceleration of the heated ions was modest in both cases, although a small fraction of the 3He ions reached about 260 keV in the second harmonic He-3 heating experiments when 5MW of ICRF power was applied. Considerable RF acceleration of deuterium beam ions was also observed in some discharges of the He-3 heating experiments (where both the second and third harmonic ion cyclotron resonance layers of the D ions are inside the plasma) whilst it was practically absent in the majority hydrogen heating scenario. While hints of improved RF heating efficiency as a function of the plasma temperature and plasma dilution (with He-4) were confirmed in the H majority case, the He-3 concentration was the main handle on the heating efficiency in the second harmonic He-3 heating scenario.


Nuclear Fusion | 2011

Demonstration of real-time control of impurity seeding plus outboard strike-point sweeping in JET ELMy H-mode plasmas

G. Maddison; C. Giroud; G. K. McCormick; B. Alper; G. Arnoux; P. C. da Silva Aresta Belo; M. N. A. Beurskens; A. Boboc; A. M. Brett; S. Brezinsek; I. Coffey; S. Devaux; P. Devynck; T. Eich; R. Felton; W. Fundamenski; J. Harling; A. Huber; S. Jachmich; E. Joffrin; P. Lomas; P. Monier-Garbet; P. D. Morgan; M. Stamp; G. Telesca; H. Thomsen; I. Voitsekhovitch; Jet-Efda Contributors

Strike-point sweeping and real-time-controlled (RTC) impurity seeding are both expected to be needed on JET following its upgrade to an all-metal wall with enhanced neutral-beam heating, thereby anticipating exhaust-control requirements plus the materials planned for ITER. Preliminary trials in the previous carbon device have combined these techniques in high-triangularity type I H-mode plasmas, using a VUV spectroscopic signal for feedback control of nitrogen injection. Compared with earlier unswept feedforward counterparts, similar strong mitigation of divertor heat load between ELMs was achieved in swept RTC cases for less than half the integrated nitrogen input and correspondingly less adverse effect upon other properties. Both sweeping and RT control contributed to this improvement. Time-average normalized energy confinement H98yt ~ 1, Greenwald density fraction fGwdt ~ 0.9 and particularly purity denoted by effective ionic charge Zefft ≈ 1.7, all remained closer to good reference levels. Transient effluxes in ELMs were also less affected, however, and would require separate active control.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2012

Optimizing ion-cyclotron resonance frequency heating for ITER: dedicated JET experiments (vol 53, 124019, 2011)

E. Lerche; D. Van Eester; J. Ongena; M.-L. Mayoral; Martin Laxåback; F. Rimini; A. Argouarch; P. Beaumont; T. Blackman; V. Bobkov; D. Brennan; A. M. Brett; G. Calabrò; Marco Cecconello; I. Coffey; L. Colas; A. Coyne; Kristel Crombé; A. Czarnecka; R. Dumont; F. Durodié; R. Felton; D. Frigione; Maria Gatu Johnson; C. Giroud; G. Gorini; M. Graham; C. Hellesen; Torbjörn Hellsten; S. Huygen

Reference EPFL-ARTICLE-178250doi:10.1088/0741-3335/54/6/069601View record in Web of Science Record created on 2012-06-15, modified on 2017-05-12


Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2011

Moderation of target loads using fuelling and impurity seeding on JET

G. Maddison; C. Giroud; K. McCormick; A. Alonso; B. Alper; Y. Andrew; G. Arnoux; P. Belo; M. Beurskens; A. Boboc; A. M. Brett; S. Brezinsek; M. Brix; I. Coffey; E. de la Luna; S. Devaux; P. de Vries; P. Devynck; T. Eich; R. Felton; W. Fundamenski; J. Harling; D. Harting; J. Hobirk; A. Huber; S. Jachmich; I. Jenkins; E. Joffrin; A. Kallenbach; M. Kempenaars


Conference on Plasma Physics of the European Physical Society | 2010

Experimental investigation of ICRF heating scenarios for ITER’s half-field Hydrogen phase performed in JET

E. Lerche; D Van Eester; Thomas Johnson; T. Hellsten; J. Ongena; M.-L. Mayoral; D. Frigione; C. Sozzi; G. Calabrò; M. Lennholm; P. Beaumont; T. Blackman; D. Brennan; A. M. Brett; Marco Cecconello; I. Coffey; A. Coyne; Kristel Crombé; A. Czarnecka; R. Felton; R Gatu; C. Giroud; G. Gorini; C. Hellesen; P. Jacquet; Kiptily; S. Knipe; A. V. Krasilnikov; M. Maslov; I. Monakhov


37th EPS Conference on Plasma Physics 2010, EPS 2010, 21 June 2010 through 25 June 2010, Dublin, Ireland | 2010

Mode conversion heating in JET plasmas with multiple mode conversion layers

D. Van Eester; E. Lerche; Thomas Johnson; Torbjörn Hellsten; J. Ongena; M.-L. Mayoral; D. Frigione; C. Sozzi; G. Calabrò; M. Lennholm; P. Beaumont; T. Blackman; D. Brennan; A. M. Brett; Marco Cecconello; I. Coffey; A. Coyne; Kristel Crombé; A. Czarnecka; R. Felton; M. Gatu Johnson; C. Giroud; G. Gorini; C. Hellesen; P. Jacquet; Yevgen O. Kazakov; V. Kiptily; S. Knipe; A. V. Krasilnikov; Y. Lin


23rd IAEA Fusion Energy Conference 2010 | 2012

Integration of a Radiative Divertor for Heat Load Control into JET Operational Scenarios

C. Giroud; G. Maddison; K. McCormick; M. N. A. Beurskens; S. Brezinsek; S. Devaux; T. Eich; L. Frassinetti; M. Groth; A. Huber; S. Jachmich; A. Järvinen; A. Kallenbach; K. Krieger; S. Lisgo; D. Moulton; S. Saarelma; G. Telesca; H. Thomsen; S. Wiesen; A. Alonso; B. Alper; G. Arnoux; P. Belo; A. Boboc; A. M. Brett; M. Brix; I. Coffey; E. de la Luna; D. Dodt

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I. Coffey

Queen's University Belfast

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Thomas Johnson

University of Texas at Austin

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Torbjörn Hellsten

Royal Institute of Technology

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A. Huber

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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S. Brezinsek

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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