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Dive into the research topics where A.R. Briesemeister is active.

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Featured researches published by A.R. Briesemeister.


Physica Scripta | 2016

Exposures of tungsten nanostructures to divertor plasmas in DIII-D

D.L. Rudakov; C.P.C. Wong; R.P. Doerner; G M Wright; T Abrams; M.J. Baldwin; J.A. Boedo; A.R. Briesemeister; C.P. Chrobak; H.Y. Guo; E.M. Hollmann; A.G. McLean; M.E. Fenstermacher; C.J. Lasnier; A.W. Leonard; R.A. Moyer; D C Pace; D. M. Thomas; J.G. Watkins

Tungsten nanostructures (W-fuzz) prepared in the PISCES-A linear device have been found to survive direct exposure to divertor plasmas in DIII-D. W-fuzz was exposed in the lower divertor of DIII-D using the divertor material evaluation system. Two samples were exposed in lower single null (LSN) deuterium H-mode plasmas. The first sample was exposed in three discharges terminated by vertical displacement event disruptions, and the second in two discharges near the lowered X-point. More recently, three samples were exposed near the lower outer strike point in predominantly helium H-mode LSN plasmas. In all cases, the W-fuzz survived plasma exposure with little obvious damage except in the areas where unipolar arcing occurred. In conclusion, arcing is effective in W-fuzz removal, and it appears that surfaces covered with W-fuzz can be more prone to arcing than smooth W surfaces.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Improved edge charge exchange recombination spectroscopy in DIII-D

C. Chrystal; Keith H. Burrell; B.A. Grierson; S.R. Haskey; Richard J. Groebner; David H. Kaplan; A.R. Briesemeister

The charge exchange recombination spectroscopy diagnostic on the DIII-D tokamak has been upgraded with the addition of more high radial resolution view chords near the edge of the plasma (r/a > 0.8). The additional views are diagnosed with the same number of spectrometers by placing fiber optics side-by-side at the spectrometer entrance with a precise separation that avoids wavelength shifted crosstalk without the use of bandpass filters. The new views improve measurement of edge impurity parameters in steep gradient, H-mode plasmas with many different shapes. The number of edge view chords with 8 mm radial separation has increased from 16 to 38. New fused silica fibers have improved light throughput and clarify the observation of non-Gaussian spectra that suggest the ion distribution function can be non-Maxwellian in low collisionality plasmas.


Physics of Plasmas | 2018

2D imaging of helium ion velocity in the DIII-D divertor

C. M. Samuell; G.D. Porter; W.H. Meyer; T.D. Rognlien; S.L. Allen; A.R. Briesemeister; A.G. McLean; L. Zeng; A. E. Jaervinen; John Howard

Two-dimensional imaging of parallel ion velocities is compared to fluid modeling simulations to understand the role of ions in determining divertor conditions and benchmark the UEDGE fluid modeling code. Pure helium discharges are used so that spectroscopic He+ measurements represent the main-ion population at small electron temperatures. Electron temperatures and densities in the divertor match simulated values to within about 20%–30%, establishing the experiment/model match as being at least as good as those normally obtained in the more regularly simulated deuterium plasmas. He+ brightness (HeII) comparison indicates that the degree of detachment is captured well by UEDGE, principally due to the inclusion of E×B drifts. Tomographically inverted Coherence Imaging Spectroscopy measurements are used to determine the He+ parallel velocities which display excellent agreement between the model and the experiment near the divertor target where He+ is predicted to be the main-ion species and where electron-dominated physics dictates the parallel momentum balance. Upstream near the X-point where He+ is a minority species and ion-dominated physics plays a more important role, there is an underestimation of the flow velocity magnitude by a factor of 2–3. These results indicate that more effort is required to be able to correctly predict ion momentum in these challenging regimes.Two-dimensional imaging of parallel ion velocities is compared to fluid modeling simulations to understand the role of ions in determining divertor conditions and benchmark the UEDGE fluid modeling code. Pure helium discharges are used so that spectroscopic He+ measurements represent the main-ion population at small electron temperatures. Electron temperatures and densities in the divertor match simulated values to within about 20%–30%, establishing the experiment/model match as being at least as good as those normally obtained in the more regularly simulated deuterium plasmas. He+ brightness (HeII) comparison indicates that the degree of detachment is captured well by UEDGE, principally due to the inclusion of E×B drifts. Tomographically inverted Coherence Imaging Spectroscopy measurements are used to determine the He+ parallel velocities which display excellent agreement between the model and the experiment near the divertor target where He+ is predicted to be the main-ion species and where electron-do...


Physics of Plasmas | 2017

Testing the role of molecular physics in dissipative divertor operations through helium plasmas at DIII-D

John M. Canik; A.R. Briesemeister; A.G. McLean; M. Groth; A.W. Leonard; J. Lore; Auna L. Moser

Recent experiments in DIII-D helium plasmas are examined to resolve the role of atomic and molecular physics in major discrepancies between experiment and modeling of dissipative divertor operation. Helium operation removes the complicated molecular processes of deuterium plasmas that are a prime candidate for the inability of standard fluid models to reproduce dissipative divertor operation, primarily the consistent under-prediction of radiated power. Modeling of these experiments shows that the full divertor radiation can be accounted for, but only if measures are taken to ensure that the model reproduces the measured divertor density. Relying on upstream measurements instead results in a lower divertor density and radiation than is measured, indicating a need for improved modeling of the connection between the divertor and the upstream scrape-off layer. These results show that fluid models are able to quantitatively describe the divertor-region plasma, including radiative losses, and indicate that effo...


Nuclear Fusion | 2015

Core density turbulence in the HSX Stellarator

Chengbin Deng; D. L. Brower; D.T. Anderson; F. S. B. Anderson; A.R. Briesemeister; K.M. Likin

Broadband turbulent density fluctuations are explored in the helically symmetric stellarator experiment (HSX) by investigating changes related to plasma heating power and location. No fluctuation response is observed to occur with large changes in electron temperature and its gradient, thereby eliminating temperature gradient as a driving mechanism. Instead, measurements reveal that density turbulence varies inversely with electron density scale length. This response is consistent with density gradient drive as one might expect for trapped electron mode (TEM) turbulence. In general, the plasma stored energy and particle confinement are higher for discharges with reduced fluctuations in the plasma core. When the density fluctuation amplitude is reduced, increased plasma rotation is also evident suggesting a role is being played by intrinsic plasma flow.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2018

Verification of Doppler coherence imaging for 2D ion velocity measurements on DIII-D

C. M. Samuell; S.L. Allen; W.H. Meyer; R.C. Isler; A.R. Briesemeister; R.S. Wilcox; C.J. Lasnier; A.G. McLean; John Howard

Coherence Imaging Spectroscopy (CIS) has emerged as a powerful tool for investigating complex ion phenomena in the boundary of magnetically confined plasma devices. The combination of Fourier-transform interferometry and high-resolution fast-framing cameras has made it possible to make sensitive velocity measurements that are also spatially resolved. However, this sensitivity makes the diagnostic vulnerable to environmental effects including thermal drifts, vibration, and magnetic fields that can influence the velocity measurement. Additionally, the ability to provide an absolute calibration for these geometries can be impacted by differences in the light-collection geometry between the plasma and reference light source, spectral impurities, and the presence of thin-films on in-vessel optics. This paper discusses the mitigation of these effects and demonstration that environmental effects result in less than 0.5 km/s error on the DIII-D CIS systems. A diagnostic comparison is used to demonstrate agreement between CIS and traditional spectroscopy once tomographic artifacts are accounted for.


Nuclear Fusion | 2015

Enhanced H-mode pedestals with lithium injection in DIII-D

T.H. Osborne; G.L. Jackson; Z. Yan; R. Maingi; D.K. Mansfield; B.A. Grierson; Chris P. Chrobak; A.G. McLean; S.L. Allen; D.J. Battaglia; A.R. Briesemeister; M.E. Fenstermacher; G.R. McKee; Philip B. Snyder


Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2015

Electron pressure balance in the SOL through the transition to detachment

A.G. McLean; A.W. Leonard; M.A. Makowski; M. Groth; S.L. Allen; J.A. Boedo; B.D. Bray; A.R. Briesemeister; T.N. Carlstrom; D. Eldon; M.E. Fenstermacher; D.N. Hill; C.J. Lasnier; C. Liu; T.H. Osborne; T.W. Petrie; V. Soukhanovskii; P.C. Stangeby; C. Tsui; E.A. Unterberg; J.G. Watkins


Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2015

Modeling of detachment experiments at DIII-D

John M. Canik; A.R. Briesemeister; C.J. Lasnier; A.W. Leonard; J. Lore; A.G. McLean; J.G. Watkins


Nuclear materials and energy | 2017

Interpretations of the impact of cross-field drifts on divertor flows in DIII-D with UEDGE

A. E. Jaervinen; S.L. Allen; M. Groth; A.G. McLean; Thomas D. Rognlien; Cameron M. Samuell; A.R. Briesemeister; M.E. Fenstermacher; David N. Hill; A.W. Leonard; G.D. Porter

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A.G. McLean

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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A.W. Leonard

California Institute of Technology

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J.G. Watkins

Sandia National Laboratories

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C.J. Lasnier

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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E.A. Unterberg

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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J. Lore

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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M.E. Fenstermacher

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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S.L. Allen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D.L. Rudakov

University of California

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