C.J. Lasnier
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by C.J. Lasnier.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008
D.L. Rudakov; J.H. Yu; J.A. Boedo; E.M. Hollmann; S. I. Krasheninnikov; R.A. Moyer; S.H. Muller; A. Yu. Pigarov; M. Rosenberg; R.D. Smirnov; W.P. West; R. L. Boivin; B.D. Bray; N.H. Brooks; A.W. Hyatt; C.P.C. Wong; A.L. Roquemore; C.H. Skinner; W.M. Solomon; Svetlana V. Ratynskaia; M.E. Fenstermacher; M. Groth; C.J. Lasnier; A.G. McLean; P.C. Stangeby
Dust production and accumulation present potential safety and operational issues for the ITER. Dust diagnostics can be divided into two groups: diagnostics of dust on surfaces and diagnostics of dust in plasma. Diagnostics from both groups are employed in contemporary tokamaks; new diagnostics suitable for ITER are also being developed and tested. Dust accumulation in ITER is likely to occur in hidden areas, e.g., between tiles and under divertor baffles. A novel electrostatic dust detector for monitoring dust in these regions has been developed and tested at PPPL. In the DIII-D tokamak dust diagnostics include Mie scattering from Nd:YAG lasers, visible imaging, and spectroscopy. Laser scattering is able to resolve particles between 0.16 and 1.6 microm in diameter; using these data the total dust content in the edge plasmas and trends in the dust production rates within this size range have been established. Individual dust particles are observed by visible imaging using fast framing cameras, detecting dust particles of a few microns in diameter and larger. Dust velocities and trajectories can be determined in two-dimension with a single camera or three-dimension using multiple cameras, but determination of particle size is challenging. In order to calibrate diagnostics and benchmark dust dynamics modeling, precharacterized carbon dust has been injected into the lower divertor of DIII-D. Injected dust is seen by cameras, and spectroscopic diagnostics observe an increase in carbon line (CI, CII, C(2) dimer) and thermal continuum emissions from the injected dust. The latter observation can be used in the design of novel dust survey diagnostics.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006
D.L. Rudakov; J.A. Boedo; R.A. Moyer; A. Litnovsky; V. Philipps; P. Wienhold; S.L. Allen; M.E. Fenstermacher; M. Groth; C.J. Lasnier; R. L. Boivin; N.H. Brooks; A.W. Leonard; W.P. West; C.P.C. Wong; A.G. McLean; P.C. Stangeby; G. De Temmerman; W.R. Wampler; J.G. Watkins
Metallic mirrors will be used in ITER for optical diagnostics working in different spectral ranges. Their optical properties will change with time due to erosion, deposition, and particle implantation. First tests of molybdenum mirrors were performed in the DIII-D divertor under deposition-dominated conditions. Two sets of mirrors recessed 2cm below the divertor floor in the private flux region were exposed to a series of identical, lower-single-null, ELMing (featuring edge localized modes) H-mode discharges with detached plasma conditions in both divertor legs. The first set of mirrors was exposed at ambient temperature, while the second set was preheated to temperatures between 140 and 80°C. During the exposures mirrors in both sets were additionally heated by radiation from the plasma. The nonheated mirrors exhibited net carbon deposition at a rate of up to 3.7nm∕s and suffered a significant drop in reflectivity. Net carbon deposition rate on the preheated mirrors was a factor of 30–100 lower and their...
Nuclear Fusion | 2005
T.E. Evans; R.A. Moyer; J.G. Watkins; T.H. Osborne; P.R. Thomas; M. Becoulet; J.A. Boedo; E. J. Doyle; M.E. Fenstermacher; K.H. Finken; R. J. Groebner; M. Groth; J. H. Harris; G.L. Jackson; R.J. La Haye; C.J. Lasnier; S. Masuzaki; N. Ohyabu; David Pretty; H. Reimerdes; T.L. Rhodes; D.L. Rudakov; M.J. Schaffer; M.R. Wade; G. Wang; W.P. West; L. Zeng
Large sub-millisecond heat pulses due to Type-I edge localized modes (ELMs) have been eliminated reproducibly in DIII-D for periods approaching nine energy confinement times (τE) with small dc currents driven in a simple magnetic perturbation coil. The current required to eliminate all but a few isolated Type-I ELM impulses during a coil pulse is less than 0.4% of plasma current. Based on magnetic field line modelling, the perturbation fields resonate with plasma flux surfaces across most of the pedestal region (0.9 ≤ ψN ≤ 1.0) when q95 = 3.7 ± 0.2, creating small remnant magnetic islands surrounded by weakly stochastic field lines. The stored energy, βN, H-mode quality factor and global energy confinement time are unaltered by the magnetic perturbation. Although some isolated ELMs occur during the coil pulse, long periods free of large Type-I ELMs (Δt > 4–6 τE) have been reproduced numerous times, on multiple experimental run days in high and intermediate triangularity plasmas, including cases matching the baseline ITER scenario 2 flux surface shape. In low triangularity, lower single null plasmas, with collisionalities near that expected in ITER, Type-I ELMs are replaced by small amplitude, high frequency Type-II-like ELMs and are often accompanied by one or more ELM-free periods approaching 1–2 τE. Large Type-I ELM impulses represent a severe constraint on the survivability of the divertor target plates in future burning plasma devices. Results presented in this paper demonstrate that non-axisymmetric edge magnetic perturbations provide a very attractive development path for active ELM control in future tokamaks such as ITER.
Physics of Plasmas | 2005
R.A. Moyer; T.E. Evans; T. H. Osborne; P.R. Thomas; M. Becoulet; J. H. Harris; K.H. Finken; J.A. Boedo; E. J. Doyle; M.E. Fenstermacher; P. Gohil; R. J. Groebner; M. Groth; G.L. Jackson; R.J. La Haye; C.J. Lasnier; A.W. Leonard; G.R. McKee; H. Reimerdes; T.L. Rhodes; D.L. Rudakov; M.J. Schaffer; P.B. Snyder; M.R. Wade; G. Wang; J.G. Watkins; W. P. West; L. Zeng
This work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy under Grant Nos. DE-FC02-04ER54698, DE-FG02- 04ER54758, DE-FG03-01ER54615, W-7405-ENG-48, DEFG03-96ER54373, DE-FG02-89ER53297, DE-AC05- 00OR22725, and DE-AC04-94AL85000.
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2005
K.H. Burrell; T.E. Evans; E. J. Doyle; M.E. Fenstermacher; R. J. Groebner; A.W. Leonard; R.A. Moyer; T.H. Osborne; M.J. Schaffer; P.B. Snyder; P.R. Thomas; W.P. West; J.A. Boedo; A. M. Garofalo; P. Gohil; G.L. Jackson; R.J. La Haye; C.J. Lasnier; H. Reimerdes; T.L. Rhodes; J. T. Scoville; W.M. Solomon; D. M. Thomas; G. Wang; J.G. Watkins; L. Zeng
Using resonant magnetic perturbations with toroidal mode number n = 3, we have produced H-mode discharges without edge localized modes (ELMs) which run with constant density and radiated power for periods up to about 2550 ms (17 energy confinement times). These ELM suppression results are achieved at pedestal collisionalities close to those desired for next step burning plasma experiments such as ITER and provide a means of eliminating the rapid erosion of divertor components in such machines which could be caused by giant ELMs. The ELM suppression is due to an enhancement in the edge particle transport which reduces the edge pressure gradient and pedestal current density below the threshold for peeling-ballooning modes. These n = 3 magnetic perturbations provide a means of active control of edge plasma transport.
Physics of Plasmas | 2012
M. A. Makowski; D. Elder; T.K. Gray; B. LaBombard; C.J. Lasnier; A.W. Leonard; R. Maingi; T.H. Osborne; P.C. Stangeby; J. L. Terry; J.G. Watkins
A coordinated effort to measure divertor heat flux characteristics in fully attached, similarly shaped H-mode plasmas on C-Mod, DIII-D, and NSTX was carried out in 2010 in order to construct a predictive scaling relation applicable to next step devices including ITER, FNSF, and DEMO. Few published scaling laws are available and those that have been published were obtained under widely varying conditions and divertor geometries, leading to conflicting predictions for this critically important quantity. This study was designed to overcome these deficiencies. Analysis of the combined data set reveals that the primary dependence of the parallel heat flux width is robustly inverse with Ip, which all three tokamaks independently demonstrate. An improved Thomson scattering system on DIII-D has yielded very accurate scrape off layer (SOL) profile measurements from which tests of parallel transport models have been made. It is found that a flux-limited model agrees best with the data at all collisionalities, while...
Nuclear Fusion | 2005
D.L. Rudakov; J.A. Boedo; R.A. Moyer; P.C. Stangeby; J.G. Watkins; D.G. Whyte; L. Zeng; N. H. Brooks; R.P. Doerner; T.E. Evans; M.E. Fenstermacher; M. Groth; E.M. Hollmann; S. I. Krasheninnikov; C.J. Lasnier; A.W. Leonard; M.A. Mahdavi; G.R. McKee; A.G. McLean; A. Yu. Pigarov; William R. Wampler; Gengchen Wang; W.P. West; C.P.C. Wong
Far Scrape-Off Layer (SOL) and near-wall plasma parameters in DIII-D depend strongly on the discharge parameters and confinement regime. In L-mode discharges cross-field transport increases with the average discharge density and flattens far SOL profiles, thus increasing plasma contact with the low field side (LFS) main chamber wall. In H-mode between edge localized modes (ELMs) the plasma?wall contact is weaker than in L-mode. During ELM fluxes of particles and heat to the LFS wall increase transiently above the L-mode values. Depending on the discharge conditions, ELMs are responsible for 30?90% of the net ion flux to the outboard chamber wall. ELMs in high density discharges feature intermittent transport events similar to those observed in L-mode and attributed to blobs of dense hot plasma formed inside the separatrix and propagating radially outwards. Though the blobs decay with radius, some of them survive long enough to reach the outer wall and possibly cause sputtering. In lower density H-modes, ELMs can feature blobs of pedestal density propagating all the way to the outer wall.
Physics of Plasmas | 2006
T.E. Evans; K.H. Burrell; M.E. Fenstermacher; R.A. Moyer; T.H. Osborne; M.J. Schaffer; W.P. West; L. W. Yan; J. Boedo; E. J. Doyle; G.L. Jackson; I. Joseph; C.J. Lasnier; A.W. Leonard; T.L. Rhodes; P. R. Thomas; J. G. Watkins; L. Zeng
Small edge resonant magnetic perturbations are used to control the pedestal transport and stability in low electron collisionality (νe*), ITER [ITER Physics Basis Editors et al., Nucl. Fusion 39, 2137 (1999)] relevant, poloidally diverted plasmas. The applied perturbations reduce the height of the density pedestal and increase its width while increasing the height of the electron pedestal temperature and its gradient. The effect of the perturbations on the pedestal gradients is controlled by the current in the perturbation coil, the poloidal mode spectrum of the coil, the neutral beam heating power, and the divertor deuterium fueling rate. Large pedestal instabilities, referred to as edge localized modes (ELMs), are completely eliminated with radial magnetic perturbations (δbr(m∕n)) at the q=m∕n=11∕3 surface exceeding δbr(11∕3)Bϕ−1=2.6×10−4, where Bϕ is the toroidal magnetic field on axis. The resulting ELM-free H-mode plasmas have stationary densities and radiated power, are maintained in DIII-D for up t...
Nuclear Fusion | 2005
E.M. Hollmann; T.C. Jernigan; M. Groth; D.G. Whyte; D.S. Gray; M. E. Austin; B.D. Bray; D.P. Brennan; N. H. Brooks; T.E. Evans; D.A. Humphreys; C.J. Lasnier; R.A. Moyer; A.G. McLean; P.B. Parks; V. Rozhansky; D.L. Rudakov; E. J. Strait; W.P. West
Impurity deposition and mixing during gas jet-initiated plasma shutdown is studied using a rapid ({approx}2 ms), massive ({approx}10{sup 22} particles) injection of neon or argon into stationary DIII-D H-mode discharges. Fast-gated camera images indicate that the bulk of the jet neutrals do not penetrate far into the plasma pedestal. Nevertheless, high ({approx}90%) thermal quench radiated power fractions are achieved; this appears to be facilitated through a combination of fast ion mixing and fast heat transport, both driven by large-scale MHD activity. Also, runaway electron suppression is achieved for sufficiently high gas jet pressures. These experiments suggest that massive gas injection could be viable for disruption mitigation in future tokamaks even if core penetration of jet neutrals is not achieved.
Physics of Plasmas | 2005
Ja Boedo; D. L. Rudakov; E. Hollmann; D. S. Gray; K.H. Burrell; R. A. Moyer; G. R. McKee; R. J. Fonck; P. C. Stangeby; T.E. Evans; P.B. Snyder; A.W. Leonard; M.A. Mahdavi; M.J. Schaffer; W.P. West; M.E. Fenstermacher; M. Groth; S.L. Allen; C.J. Lasnier; G.D. Porter; Nancy Wolf; Rj Colchin; L. Zeng; G. Wang; J. G. Watkins; T. Takahashi
High temporal and spatial resolution measurements in the boundary of the DIII-D tokamak show that edge-localized modes (ELMs) are produced in the low field side, are poloidally localized and are composed of fast bursts (∼20 to 40μs long) of hot, dense plasma on a background of less dense, colder plasma (∼5×1018m−3, 50 eV) possibly created by the bursts themselves. The ELMs travel radially in the scrape-off layer (SOL), starting at the separatrix at ∼450m∕s, and slow down to ∼150m∕s near the wall, convecting particles and energy to the SOL and walls. The temperature and density in the ELM plasma initially correspond to those at the top of the density pedestal but quickly decay with radius in the SOL. The temperature decay length (∼1.2 to 1.5 cm) is much shorter than the density decay length (∼3 to 8 cm), and the latter decreases with increasing pedestal (and SOL) density. The local particle and energy flux (assuming Ti=Te) at the midplane wall during the bursts are 10% to 50% (∼1 to 2×1021m−2s−1) and 1% to...