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Dive into the research topics where F. Leipold is active.

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Featured researches published by F. Leipold.


Bioresource Technology | 2013

Pretreatment of the macroalgae Chaetomorpha linum for the production of bioethanol - Comparison of five pretreatment technologies

Nadja Schultz-Jensen; Anders Thygesen; F. Leipold; Sune Tjalfe Thomsen; Christian Roslander; Hans Lilholt; Anne Belinda Bjerre

A qualified estimate for pretreatment of the macroalgae Chaetomorpha linum for ethanol production was given, based on the experience of pretreatment of land-based biomass. C. linum was subjected to hydrothermal pretreatment (HTT), wet oxidation (WO), steam explosion (STEX), plasma-assisted pretreatment (PAP) and ball milling (BM), to determine effects of the pretreatment methods on the conversion of C. linum into ethanol by simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF). WO and BM showed the highest ethanol yield of 44 g ethanol/100g glucan, which was close to the theoretical ethanol yield of 57 g ethanol/100g glucan. A 64% higher ethanol yield, based on raw material, was reached after pretreatment with WO and BM compared with unpretreated C. linum, however 50% of the biomass was lost during WO. Results indicated that the right combination of pretreatment and marine macroalgae, containing high amounts of glucan and cleaned from salts, enhanced the ethanol yield significantly.


Nuclear Fusion | 2011

On velocity space interrogation regions of fast-ion collective Thomson scattering at ITER

M. Salewski; Stefan Kragh Nielsen; Henrik Bindslev; V. Furtula; N.N. Gorelenkov; Søren Bang Korsholm; F. Leipold; F. Meo; Poul Michelsen; D. Moseev; M. Stejner

The collective Thomson scattering (CTS) diagnostic proposed for ITER is designed to measure projected 1D fast-ion velocity distribution functions at several spatial locations simultaneously. The frequency shift of scattered radiation and the scattering geometry place fast ions that caused the collective scattering in well-defined regions in velocity space, here dubbed interrogation regions. Since the CTS instrument measures entire spectra of scattered radiation, many different interrogation regions are probed simultaneously. We here give analytic expressions for weight functions describing the interrogation regions, and we show typical interrogation regions of the proposed ITER CTS system. The backscattering system with receivers on the low-field side is sensitive to fast ions with pitch |p| = |v∥/v| 0.6–0.8. Additionally, we use weight functions to reconstruct 2D fast-ion distribution functions, given two projected 1D velocity distribution functions from simulated simultaneous measurements with the back- and forward scattering systems.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

A line-of-sight electron cyclotron emission receiver for electron cyclotron resonance heating feedback control of tearing modes

J. W. Oosterbeek; A. Bürger; E. Westerhof; M. de Baar; M.A. van den Berg; W.A. Bongers; M.F. Graswinckel; B. A. Hennen; O.G. Kruijt; J. Thoen; R. Heidinger; Søren Bang Korsholm; F. Leipold; Stefan Kragh Nielsen

An electron cyclotron emission (ECE) receiver inside the electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH) transmission line has been brought into operation. The ECE is extracted by placing a quartz plate acting as a Fabry-Perot interferometer under an angle inside the electron cyclotron wave (ECW) beam. ECE measurements are obtained during high power ECRH operation. This demonstrates the successful operation of the diagnostic and, in particular, a sufficient suppression of the gyrotron component preventing it from interfering with ECE measurements. When integrated into a feedback system for the control of plasma instabilities this line-of-sight ECE diagnostic removes the need to localize the instabilities in absolute coordinates.


Optics Express | 2013

Optical diagnostics of a gliding arc

Zhiwei Sun; Jiajian Jj Zhu; Z. S. Li; Marcus Aldén; F. Leipold; M. Salewski; Yukihiro Kusano

Dynamic processes in a gliding arc plasma generated between two diverging electrodes in ambient air driven by 31.25 kHz AC voltage were investigated using spatially and temporally resolved optical techniques. The life cycles of the gliding arc were tracked in fast movies using a high-speed camera with framing rates of tens to hundreds of kHz, showing details of ignition, motion, pulsation, short-cutting, and extinction of the plasma column. The ignition of a new discharge occurs before the extinction of the previous discharge. The developed, moving plasma column often short-cuts its current path triggered by Townsend breakdown between the two legs of the gliding arc. The emission from the plasma column is shown to pulsate at a frequency of 62.5 kHz, i.e., twice the frequency of the AC power supply. Optical emission spectra of the plasma radiation show the presence of excited N2, NO and OH radicals generated in the plasma and the dependence of their relative intensities on both the distance relative to the electrodes and the phase of the driving AC power. Planar laser-induced fluorescence of the ground-state OH radicals shows high intensity outside the plasma column rather than in the center suggesting that ground-state OH is not formed in the plasma column but in its vicinity.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2009

Comparison of collective Thomson scattering signals due to fast ions in ITER scenarios with fusion and auxiliary heating

M. Salewski; O. Asunta; L.-G. Eriksson; Henrik Bindslev; Ville Hynönen; Søren Bang Korsholm; Taina Kurki-Suonio; F. Leipold; F. Meo; Poul Michelsen; Stefan Kragh Nielsen; J Roenby

Auxiliary heating such as neutral beam injection (NBI) and ion cyclotron resonance heating (ICRH) will accelerate ions in ITER up to energies in the MeV range, i.e. energies which are also typical for alpha particles. Fast ions of any of these populations will elevate the collective Thomson scattering (CTS) signal for the proposed CTS diagnostic in ITER. It is of interest to determine the contributions of these fast ion populations to the CTS signal for large Doppler shifts of the scattered radiation since conclusions can mostly be drawn for the dominant contributor. In this study, distribution functions of fast ions generated by NBI and ICRH are calculated for a steady-state ITER burning plasma equilibrium with the ASCOT and PION codes, respectively. The parameters for the auxiliary heating systems correspond to the design currently foreseen for ITER. The geometry of the CTS system for ITER is chosen such that near perpendicular and near parallel velocity components are resolved. In the investigated ICRH scenario, waves at 50 MHz resonate with tritium at the second harmonic off-axis on the low field side. Effects of a minority heating scheme with 3He are also considered. CTS scattering functions for fast deuterons, fast tritons, fast 3He and the fusion born alphas are presented, revealing that fusion alphas dominate the measurable signal by an order of magnitude or more in the Doppler shift frequency ranges typical for fast ions. Hence the observable CTS signal can mostly be attributed to the alpha population in these frequency ranges. The exceptions are limited regions in space with some non-negligible signal due to beam ions or fast 3He which give rise to about 30% and 10–20% of the CTS signal, respectively. In turn, the dominance of the alpha contribution implies that the effects of other fast ion contributions will be difficult to observe by CTS.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2010

Fast-ion redistribution due to sawtooth crash in the TEXTOR tokamak measured by collective Thomson scattering

S. K. Nielsen; Henrik Bindslev; M. Salewski; A. Bürger; E. Delabie; V. Furtula; M. Kantor; Søren Bang Korsholm; F. Leipold; F. Meo; Poul Michelsen; D. Moseev; J.W. Oosterbeek; M. Stejner; E. Westerhof; Paul P. Woskov

Here we present collective Thomson scattering measurements of 1D fast-ion velocity distribution functions in neutral beam heated TEXTOR plasmas with sawtooth oscillations. Up to 50% of the fast ions in the centre are redistributed as a consequence of a sawtooth crash. We resolve various directions to the magnetic field. The fast-ion distribution is found to be anisotropic as expected. For a resolved angle of 39? to the magnetic field we find a drop in the fast-ion distribution of 20?40%. For a resolved angle of 83? to the magnetic field the drop is no larger than 20%.


Journal of Physics D | 2014

Dynamics, OH distributions and UV emission of a gliding arc at various flow-rates investigated by optical measurements

Jiajian Zhu; Zhiwei Sun; Zhongshan Li; Andreas Ehn; Marcus Aldén; M. Salewski; F. Leipold; Yukihiro Kusano

We demonstrate a plasma discharge which is generated between two diverging electrodes and extended into a gliding arc in non-equilibrium condition by an air flow at atmospheric pressure. Effects of the air flow rates on the dynamics, ground-state OH distributions and spectral characterization of UV emission of the gliding arc were investigated by optical methods. High-speed photography was utilized to reveal flow-rate dependent dynamics such as ignitions, propagation, short-cutting events, extinctions and conversions of the discharge from glowtype to spark-type. Short-cutting events and ignitions occur more frequently at higher flow rates. The anchor points of the gliding arc are mostly steady at the top of the electrodes at lower flow rates whereas at higher flow rates they glide up along the electrodes most of the time. The afterglow of fully developed gliding arcs is observed to decay over hundreds of microseconds after being electronically short-cut by a newly ignited arc. The extinction time decreases with the increase of the flow rate. The frequency of the conversion of a discharge from glow-type to spark-type increases with the flow rate. Additionally, spatial distributions of ground-state OH were investigated using planar laser-induced fluorescence. The results show that the shape, height, intensity and thickness of ground-state OH distribution vary significantly with air flow rates. Finally, UV emission of the gliding arc is measured using optical emission spectroscopy and it is found that the emission intensity of NO gamma (A-X), OH (A-X) and N-2 (C-B) increase with the flow rates showing more characteristics of spark-type arcs. The observed phenomena indicate the significance of the interaction between local turbulence and the gliding arc.


Nuclear Fusion | 2011

Dynamics of fast ions during sawtooth oscillations in the TEXTOR tokamak measured by collective Thomson scattering

Stefan Kragh Nielsen; M. Salewski; Henrik Bindslev; A. Bürger; V. Furtula; M. Kantor; Søren Bang Korsholm; H. R. Koslowski; A. Krämer-Flecken; F. Leipold; F. Meo; Poul Michelsen; D. Moseev; J. W. Oosterbeek; M. Stejner; E. Westerhof

Experimental investigations of sawteeth interaction with fast ions measured by collective Thomson scattering on TEXTOR are presented. Time-resolved measurements of localized 1D fast-ion distribution functions allow us to study fast-ion dynamics during several sawtooth cycles. Sawtooth oscillations interact strongly with the fast-ion population in a wide range of plasma parameters. Part of the ion phase space density oscillates out of phase with the sawtooth oscillation during hydrogen neutral beam injection (NBI). These oscillations most likely originate from fast hydrogen ions with energies close to the full injection energy. At lower energies passing fast ions in the plasma centre are strongly redistributed at the time of sawtooth collapse but no redistribution of trapped fast ions is observed. The redistribution of fast ions from deuterium NBI in the plasma centre is found to vary throughout velocity space. The reduction is most pronounced for passing ions. We find no evidence of inverted sawteeth outside the sawtooth inversion surface in the fast-ion distribution function.


Nuclear Fusion | 2012

Tomography of fast-ion velocity-space distributions from synthetic CTS and FIDA measurements

M. Salewski; B. Geiger; S. K. Nielsen; Henrik Bindslev; M. Garcia-Munoz; W.W. Heidbrink; Søren Bang Korsholm; F. Leipold; F. Meo; Poul Michelsen; D. Moseev; M. Stejner; G. Tardini

We compute tomographies of 2D fast-ion velocity distribution functions from synthetic collective Thomson scattering (CTS) and fast-ion Dα (FIDA) 1D measurements using a new reconstruction prescription. Contradicting conventional wisdom we demonstrate that one single 1D CTS or FIDA view suffices to compute accurate tomographies of arbitrary 2D functions under idealized conditions. Under simulated experimental conditions, single-view tomographies do not resemble the original fast-ion velocity distribution functions but nevertheless show their coarsest features. For CTS or FIDA systems with many simultaneous views on the same measurement volume, the resemblance improves with the number of available views, even if the resolution in each view is varied inversely proportional to the number of views, so that the total number of measurements in all views is the same. With a realistic four-view system, tomographies of a beam ion velocity distribution function at ASDEX Upgrade reproduce the general shape of the function and the location of the maxima at full and half injection energy of the beam ions. By applying our method to real many-view CTS or FIDA measurements, one could determine tomographies of 2D fast-ion velocity distribution functions experimentally.


Nuclear Fusion | 2014

Measurement of a 2D fast-ion velocity distribution function by tomographic inversion of fast-ion D-alpha spectra

M. Salewski; B. Geiger; A. S. Jacobsen; M. Garcia-Munoz; W.W. Heidbrink; Søren Bang Korsholm; F. Leipold; Jens Madsen; D. Moseev; S. K. Nielsen; J. Juul Rasmussen; M. Stejner; G. Tardini; M. Weiland

We present the first measurement of a local fast-ion 2D velocity distribution function f(v?, v?). To this end, we heated a plasma in ASDEX Upgrade by neutral beam injection and measured spectra of fast-ion D? (FIDA) light from the plasma centre in three views simultaneously. The measured spectra agree very well with synthetic spectra calculated from a TRANSP/NUBEAM simulation. Based on the measured FIDA spectra alone, we infer f(v?, v?) by tomographic inversion. Salient features of our measurement of f(v?, v?) agree reasonably well with the simulation: the measured as well as the simulated f(v?, v?) are lopsided towards negative velocities parallel to the magnetic field, and they have similar shapes. Further, the peaks in the simulation of f(v?, v?) at full and half injection energies of the neutral beam also appear in the measurement at similar velocity-space locations. We expect that we can measure spectra in up to seven views simultaneously in the next ASDEX Upgrade campaign which would further improve measurements of f(v?, v?) by tomographic inversion.

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M. Salewski

Technical University of Denmark

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M. Stejner

Technical University of Denmark

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Poul Michelsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Søren Bang Korsholm

Technical University of Denmark

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F. Meo

Technical University of Denmark

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S. K. Nielsen

Technical University of Denmark

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J. Juul Rasmussen

Technical University of Denmark

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Stefan Kragh Nielsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Yukihiro Kusano

Technical University of Denmark

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