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Featured researches published by Benoit P. Leblanc.


Nuclear Fusion | 2001

Equilibrium properties of spherical torus plasmas in NSTX

Steven Anthony Sabbagh; S.M. Kaye; J. Menard; F. Paoletti; M.G. Bell; R.E. Bell; J. Bialek; M. Bitter; E.D. Fredrickson; D.A. Gates; A.H. Glasser; H.W. Kugel; L. L. Lao; Benoit P. Leblanc; R. Maingi; Ricardo Jose Maqueda; E. Mazzucato; D. Mueller; M. Ono; S.F. Paul; M. J. Peng; C.H. Skinner; D. Stutman; G. A. Wurden; W. Zhu

Research in NSTX has been conducted to establish spherical torus plasmas to be used for high ?, auxiliary heated experiments. This device has a major radius R0 = 0.86?m and a midplane halfwidth of 0.7?m. It has been operated with toroidal magnetic field B0 ? 0.3?T and Ip ? 1.0?MA. The evolution of the plasma equilibrium is analysed between discharges with an automated version of the EFIT code. Limiter, double null and lower single null diverted configurations have been sustained for several energy confinement times. The plasma stored energy reached 92?kJ (?t = 17.8%) with neutral beam heating. A plasma elongation in the range 1.6 ? ? ? 2.0 and a triangularity in the range 0.25 ? ? ? 0.45 have been sustained, with values of ? = 2.6 and ? = 0.6 being reached transiently. The reconstructed magnetic signals are fitted to the corresponding measured values with low errors. Aspects of the plasma boundary, pressure and safety factor profiles are supported by measurements from non-magnetic diagnostics. Plasma densities have reached 0.8 and 1.2 times the Greenwald limit in deuterium and helium plasmas, respectively, with no clear limit encountered. Instabilities including sawteeth and reconnection events, characterized by Mirnov oscillations, and a perturbation of the Ip, ? and li evolutions, have been observed. A low q limit was observed and is imposed by a low toroidal mode number kink instability.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2009

Plasma response to lithium-coated plasma-facing components in the National Spherical Torus Experiment

M.G. Bell; H.W. Kugel; R. Kaita; Leonid E. Zakharov; H. Schneider; Benoit P. Leblanc; D.K. Mansfield; R.E. Bell; R. Maingi; S. Ding; S.M. Kaye; S. Paul; S.P. Gerhardt; John M. Canik; J. C. Hosea; G. Taylor

Experiments in the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) have shown beneficial effects on the performance of divertor plasmas as a result of applying lithium coatings on the graphite and carbon-fiber-composite plasma-facing components. These coatings have mostly been applied by a pair of lithium evaporators mounted at the top of the vacuum vessel which inject collimated streams of lithium vapor toward the lower divertor. In neutral beam injection (NBI)-heated deuterium H-mode plasmas run immediately after the application of lithium, performance modifications included decreases in the plasma density, particularly in the edge, and inductive flux consumption, and increases in the electron and ion temperatures and the energy confinement time. Reductions in the number and amplitude of edge-localized modes (ELMs) were observed, including complete ELM suppression for periods of up to 1.2 s, apparently as a result of altering the stability of the edge. However, in the plasmas where ELMs were suppressed, there was a significant secular increase in the effective ion charge Zeff and the radiated power as a result of increases in the carbon and medium-Z metallic impurities, although not of lithium itself which remained at a very low level in the plasma core, <0.1%. The impurity buildup could be inhibited by repetitively triggering ELMs with the application of brief pulses of an n = 3 radial field perturbation. The reduction in the edge density by lithium also inhibited parasitic losses through the scrape-off-layer of ICRF power coupled to the plasma, enabling the waves to heat electrons in the core of H-mode plasmas produced by NBI. Lithium has also been introduced by injecting a stream of chemically stabilized, fine lithium powder directly into the scrape-off-layer of NBI-heated plasmas. The lithium was ionized in the SOL and appeared to flow along the magnetic field to the divertor plates. This method of coating produced similar effects to the evaporated lithium but at lower amounts.


Physics of Plasmas | 2006

Blob birth and transport in the tokamak edge plasma: analysis of imaging data

J.R. Myra; D. A. D’Ippolito; D.P. Stotler; S.J. Zweben; Benoit P. Leblanc; J. Menard; R. Maqueda; J.A. Boedo

High-speed high-spatial-resolution data obtained by the gas puff imaging (GPI) diagnostic on the National Spherical Torus Experiment [M. Ono, M.G. Bell, R.E. Bell et al. Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 45, A335 (2003).] is analyzed and interpreted in light of recent theoretical models for electrostatic edge turbulence and blob propagation. The experiment is described in terms of theoretical regimes that predict different dependencies for the radial velocity of blob convection. Using the GPI data, atomic physics analysis, and blob tracking on a restricted dataset, it is shown that the observed blob velocities in the scrape-off layer are bounded by a theory-based minimum velocity associated with the sheath-connected regime. A similar maximum velocity bound associated with the resistive-ballooning regime is also observed. Turning to the question of blob creation, it is shown that blobs are born with a density and temperature characteristic of the plasma conditions where underlying linear edge drift-curvature in...


Nuclear Fusion | 2010

Advances in global MHD mode stabilization research on NSTX

Steven Anthony Sabbagh; J.W. Berkery; R.E. Bell; J. Bialek; S.P. Gerhardt; J. Menard; R. Betti; D.A. Gates; B. Hu; O. Katsuro-Hopkins; Benoit P. Leblanc; F. M. Levinton; J. Manickam; K. Tritz; H. Yuh

Stabilizing modes that limit plasma beta and reduce their deleterious effect on plasma rotation are key goals for the efficient operation of a fusion reactor. Passive stabilization and active control of global kink/ballooning modes and resistive wall modes (RWMs) have been demonstrated on NSTX and research is now advancing towards understanding the stabilization physics and reliably maintaining the high beta plasma for confident extrapolation to ITER and a fusion component test facility based on the spherical torus. Active n = 1 control experiments with an expanded sensor set, combined with low levels of n = 3 field phased to reduce error fields, reduced resonant field amplification and maintained plasma rotation, exceeded normalized beta = 6 and produced record discharge durations limited by magnet system constraints. Details of the observed RWM dynamics during active control show the mode being converted to a rotating kink that stabilizes or saturates and may lead to tearing modes. Discharges with rotation reduced by n = 3 magnetic braking suffer beta collapse at normalized beta = 4.2 approaching the no-wall limit, while normalized beta greater than 5.5 has been reached in these plasmas with n = 1 active control, in agreement with the single-mode RWM theory. Advanced state-space control algorithms proposed for RWM control in ITER theoretically yield significant stabilization improvements. Values of relative phase between the measured n = 1 mode and the applied correction field that experimentally produce stability/instability agree with RWM control modelling. Experimental mode destabilization occurs over a large range of plasma rotation, challenging the notion of a simple scalar critical rotation speed defining marginal stability. Stability calculations including kinetic modifications to the ideal MHD theory are applied to marginally stable experimental equilibria. Plasma rotation and collisionality variations are examined in the calculations. Intermediate rotation levels are less stable, consistent with experimental observations. Trapped ion resonances play a key role in this result. Recent experiments have demonstrated magnetic braking by non-resonant n = 2 fields. The observed rotation damping profile is broader than found for n = 3 fields. Increased ion temperature in the region of maximum braking torque increases the observed rate of rotation damping, consistent with the theory of neoclassical toroidal viscosity at low collisionality.


Physics of Plasmas | 1997

Local transport barrier formation and relaxation in reverse-shear plasmas on the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor

E. J. Synakowski; S. H. Batha; Michael Beer; M.G. Bell; R.E. Bell; R. V. Budny; C. E. Bush; Philip C. Efthimion; T. S. Hahm; G. W. Hammett; Benoit P. Leblanc; F. M. Levinton; E. Mazzucato; H. Park; A. T. Ramsey; G. Schmidt; G. Rewoldt; Stacey D. Scott; G. Taylor; M. C. Zarnstorff

The roles of turbulence stabilization by sheared E×B flow and Shafranov shift gradients are examined for Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor [D. J. Grove and D. M. Meade, Nucl. Fusion 25, 1167 (1985)] enhanced reverse-shear (ERS) plasmas. Both effects in combination provide the basis of a positive-feedback model that predicts reinforced turbulence suppression with increasing pressure gradient. Local fluctuation behavior at the onset of ERS confinement is consistent with this framework. The power required for transitions into the ERS regime are lower when high power neutral beams are applied earlier in the current profile evolution, consistent with the suggestion that both effects play a role. Separation of the roles of E×B and Shafranov shift effects was performed by varying the E×B shear through changes in the toroidal velocity with nearly steady-state pressure profiles. Transport and fluctuation levels increase only when E×B shearing rates are driven below a critical value that is comparable to the fastest line...


Nuclear Fusion | 2011

Taming the plasma–material interface with the 'snowflake' divertor in NSTX

V. Soukhanovskii; J.-W. Ahn; R.E. Bell; D.A. Gates; S.P. Gerhardt; R. Kaita; E. Kolemen; Benoit P. Leblanc; R. Maingi; Michael A. Makowski; R. Maqueda; A.G. McLean; J. Menard; D. Mueller; S. Paul; R. Raman; A.L. Roquemore; D. D. Ryutov; S.A. Sabbagh; H.A. Scott

Experiments in several tokamaks have provided increasing support for the snowflake configuration as a viable tokamak heat exhaust concept. This white paper summarizes the snowflake properties predicted theoretically and studied experimentally, and identifies outstanding issues to be resolved in existing and future facilities before the snowflake divertor can qualify for the reactor interface.


Nuclear Fusion | 2006

Resistive wall stabilized operation in rotating high beta NSTX plasmas

Steven Anthony Sabbagh; A. Sontag; J. Bialek; D.A. Gates; A.H. Glasser; J. Menard; W. Zhu; M.G. Bell; R.E. Bell; Anders Bondeson; C.E. Bush; James D. Callen; M. S. Chu; C. C. Hegna; S.M. Kaye; L. L. Lao; Benoit P. Leblanc; Yueqiang Liu; R. Maingi; D. Mueller; K. C. Shaing; D. Stutman; K. Tritz; Cheng Zhang

The National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) has demonstrated the advantages of low aspect ratio geometry in accessing high toroidal and normalized plasma beta, and βN ≡ 10 8〈βt〉 aB0/Ip. Experiments have reached βt = 39% and βN = 7.2 through boundary and profile optimization. High βN plasmas can exceed the ideal no-wall stability limit, βNno-wall, for periods much greater than the wall eddy current decay time. Resistive wall mode (RWM) physics is studied to understand mode stabilization in these plasmas. The toroidal mode spectrum of unstable RWMs has been measured with mode number n up to 3. The critical rotation frequency of Bondeson-Chu, Ωcrit = ωA/(4q2), describes well the RWM stability of NSTX plasmas when applied over the entire rotation profile and in conjunction with the ideal stability criterion. Rotation damping and global rotation collapse observed in plasmas exceeding βNno-wall differs from the damping observed during tearing mode activity and can be described qualitatively by drag due to neoclassical toroidal viscosity in the helically perturbed field of an ideal displacement. Resonant field amplification of an applied n = 1 field perturbation has been measured and increases with increasing βN. Equilibria are reconstructed including measured ion and electron pressure, toroidal rotation and flux isotherm constraint in plasmas with core rotation ω/ωA up to 0.48. Peak pressure shifts of 18% of the minor radius from the magnetic axis have been reconstructed.


Physics of Plasmas | 2006

Structure and motion of edge turbulence in the National Spherical Torus Experiment and Alcator C-Mod

Stewart J. Zweben; R. Maqueda; J. L. Terry; T. Munsat; J. Myra; D. A. D’Ippolito; D. A. Russell; J. A. Krommes; Benoit P. Leblanc; T. Stoltzfus-Dueck; D.P. Stotler; K. M. Williams; C.E. Bush; R. Maingi; O. Grulke; S.A. Sabbagh; A.E. White

In this paper we compare the structure and motion of edge turbulence observed in L-mode vs. H-mode plasmas in the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) [M. Ono, M. G. Bell, R. E. Bell et al., Plasma Phys. Controlled Fusion 45, A335 (2003)]. The radial and poloidal correlation lengths are not significantly different between the L-mode and the H-mode in the cases examined. The poloidal velocity fluctuations are lower and the radial profiles of the poloidal turbulence velocity are somewhat flatter in the H-mode compared with the L-mode plasmas. These results are compared with similar measurements Alcator C-Mod [E. Marmar, B. Bai, R. L. Boivin et al., Nucl. Fusion 43, 1610 (2003)], and with theoretical models.


Physics of fluids. B, Plasma physics | 1990

Control of plasma shape and performance of the PBX‐M tokamak experiment in high‐βt /high‐βp regimes

R.E. Bell; N. Asakura; S. Bernabei; M. S. Chance; P.‐A. Duperrex; R. J. Fonck; G. M. Gammel; G. J. Greene; R. Hatcher; A. Holland; Stephen C. Jardin; T.‐W. Jiang; R. Kaita; S.M. Kaye; C. E. Kessel; H.W. Kugel; Benoit P. Leblanc; F. M. Levinton; M. Okabayashi; M. Ono; S. Paul; E. T. Powell; Y. Qin; D. W. Roberts; N. R. Sauthoff; S. Sesnic; H. Takahashi

The highly indented plasmas of the PBX‐M tokamak experiment [Plasma Physics and Controlled Nuclear Fusion Research (IAEA, Vienna, 1989), Vol. 1, p. 97] have reached plasma regimes of both high volume‐averaged beta (βt), and high‐beta poloidal (βp), and show evidence of the suppression of external surface modes by the passive stabilizing system. Values of βt up to 4.0 I/aB (% MA/m T) with Ti(0)≊4 keV have been obtained. A magnetohydrodynamic analysis of plasmas with βp=2.0 indicates that these plasmas are near the threshold of the second stability regime. A value of βt of 6.8% has been reached with Ti(0)>5 keV and an indentation of 28%. Control of plasma shape is accomplished with a feedback system that uses a moment expansion about a single equilibrium and is augmented by time‐dependent waveforms to redefine plasma shape. Diagnostics to measure the safety factor q have been developed and used to make accurate measurements of q(r) and to verify changes made in q(0).


Nuclear Fusion | 2010

ELM destabilization by externally applied non-axisymmetric magnetic perturbations in NSTX

John M. Canik; R. Maingi; T.E. Evans; R.E. Bell; S.P. Gerhardt; H.W. Kugel; Benoit P. Leblanc; J. Manickam; J. Menard; T.H. Osborne; Jin Myung Park; S. Paul; P.B. Snyder; S.A. Sabbagh; E.A. Unterberg

We report on a recent set of experiments performed in NSTX to explore the effects of non-axisymmetric magnetic perturbations on the stability of edge-localized modes (ELMs). The application of these 3D fields in NSTX was found to have a strong effect on ELM stability, including the destabilization of ELMs in H-modes otherwise free of large ELMs. Exploiting the effect of the perturbations, ELMs have been controllably introduced into lithium-enhanced ELM-free H-modes, causing a reduction in impurity accumulation while maintaining high confinement. Although these experiments show the principle of the combined use of lithium coatings and 3D fields, further optimization is required in order to reduce the size of the induced ELMs.

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R.E. Bell

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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J. Menard

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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S.M. Kaye

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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R. Maingi

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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J. R. Wilson

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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M.G. Bell

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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R. Kaita

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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H.W. Kugel

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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J. C. Hosea

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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