G.L. Schmidt
Princeton University
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Featured researches published by G.L. Schmidt.
Journal of Computational Physics | 1981
R.J. Goldston; D. McCune; H.H. Towner; S. Davis; R.J. Hawryluk; G.L. Schmidt
A set of numerical techniques for calculating heat and particle source rates due to neutral beam injection in axisymmetric tokamaks is described. While these techniques consume a substantial amount of computer time, they take into account a number of significant, and normally neglected, effects. Examples of these effects are reionization of escaping charge exchanged beam particles, finite fast ion orbit excursions, beam deposition through collisions of beam neutrals with circulating beam ions, and the transport of thermal neutrals in the plasma due to charge changing collisions with beam ions.
Journal of Nuclear Materials | 1984
S. Kaye; M.G. Bell; K. Bol; D. A. Boyd; K. Brau; D. Buchenauer; Robert V. Budny; A. Cavallo; P. Couture; T. Crowley; D.S. Darrow; H.P. Eubank; R.J. Fonck; R.J. Goldston; B. Grek; K. P. Jaehnig; D. Johnson; R. Kaita; H. Kugel; B. Leblanc; J. Manickam; D. Manos; D.K. Mansfield; E. Mazzucato; R. McCann; D. McCune; K. McGuire; D. Mueller; A. Murdock; M. Okabayashi
Abstract The PDX divertor configuration has recently been converted from an open to a closed geometry to inhibit the return of neutral gas from the divertor region to the main chamber. Since then, operation in a regime with high energy confinement in neutral beam heated discharges (ASDEX H-mode) has been routine over a wide range of operating conditions. These H-mode discharges are characterized by a sudden drop in divertor density and H α emission and a spontaneous rise in main chamber plasma density during neutral beam injection. The confinement time is found to scale nearly linearly with plasma current, but can be degraded due either to the presence of edge instabilities or heavy gas puffing. Detailed Thomson scattering temperature profiles show high values of T c near the plasma edge (∼ 450 eV) with sharp radial gradients (∼ 400 eV/cm) near the separatrix. Density profiles are broad and also exhibit steep gradients close to the separatrix.
Physics of Plasmas | 2000
L. R. Baylor; T.C. Jernigan; S. K. Combs; W.A. Houlberg; M. Murakami; P. Gohil; K.H. Burrell; C. M. Greenfield; R. J. Groebner; C.-L. Hsieh; R.J. La Haye; P.B. Parks; G. M. Staebler; Diii-D Team; G.L. Schmidt; D. Ernst; E. J. Synakowski; M. Porkolab
The capability to inject deuterium pellets from the magnetic high field side (HFS) has been added to the DIII-D tokamak [J. L. Luxon and L. G. Davis, Fusion Technol. 8, 441 (1985)]. It is observed that pellets injected from the HFS lead to deeper mass deposition than identical pellets injected from the outside midplane, in spite of a factor of 4 lower pellet speed. HFS injected pellets have been used to generate peaked density profile plasmas [peaking factor (ne(0)/〈ne〉) in excess of 3] that develop internal transport barriers when centrally heated with neutral beam injection. The transport barriers are formed in conditions where Te∼Ti and q(0) is above unity. The peaked density profiles, characteristic of the internal transport barrier, persist for several energy confinement times. The pellets are also used to investigate transport barrier physics and modify plasma edge conditions. Transitions from L- to H-mode have been triggered by pellets, effectively lowering the H-mode threshold power by 2.4 MW. Pel...
Journal of Nuclear Materials | 1989
H.F. Dylla; M. Ulrickson; M.G. Bell; D.K. Owens; D. Buchenauer; R.V. Budny; K. W. Hill; S.J. Kilpatrick; D. Manos; P. H. LaMarche; A. T. Ramsey; G.L. Schmidt; M. C. Zarnstorff
The conditioning techniques applied to the TFTR first-wall configuration that will be in place for the DT experiments in 1990–1991 are reviewed. Of primary interest is the helium conditioning procedure that was developed to control hydrogenic recycling from the graphite, inner-wall bumper limiter. Operation of TFTR over the plasma density range for gas-fueled ohmic plasmas, ne = (2–5) × 1019m−3, typically results in hydrogenic recycling coefficients near unity. The use of the helium conditioning procedure produced recycling coefficients as low as 0.5, and decreased the minimum ohmic plasma density to ne = 0.5 × 1019m−3 at IP = 0.8 MA. Low density ohmic target plasmas with low recycling conditions are prerequisite conditions for the enhanced confinement (e.g., “supershot”), neutral-beam-heated discharges observed in TFTR during 1986–1987, which is the primary mode being considered for study in the DT experiments. The recycling changes induced by the helium conditioning procedure are believed to be the result of a plasma pumping effect in the graphite induced by He and C ion desorption of hydrogenic species from the near-surface (< 20 nm) layer of the limiter. The capacity of the conditioned limiter to pump gas-fueled, pellet-fueled, and neutral-beam-fueled discharges is compared. The helium conditioning technique is also beneficial for isotopic exchange and for minimizing the in-vessel tritium inventory.
Journal of Nuclear Materials | 1987
H.F. Dylla; Team Tftr Team; M.G. Bell; W. Blanchard; P. P. Boody; N. Bretz; R.V. Budny; C.E. Bush; Joseph L. Cecchi; S.A. Cohen; S. K. Combs; S. Davis; B.L. Doyle; P.C. Efthimion; A. C. England; H.P. Eubank; R.J. Fonck; E. D. Fredrickson; L R Grisham; R.J. Goldston; B. Grek; R. Groebner; R.J. Hawryluk; D.B. Heifetz; H. W. Hendel; K. W. Hill; S. Hiroe; R. Hulse; D. Johnson; L. C. Johnson
This paper presents a summary of plasma-material interactions which influence the operation of TFTR with high current (≤ 2.2 MA) ohmically heated, and high-power (∼ 10 MW) neutral-beam heated plasmas. The conditioning procedures which are applied routinely to the first-wall hardware are reviewed. Fueling characteristics during gas, pellet, and neutral-beam fueling are described. Recycling coefficients near unity are observed for most gas fueled discharges. Gas fueled discharges after helium discharge conditioning of the toroidal bumper limiter, and discharges fueled by neutral beams and pellets, show R<1. In the vicinity of the gas fueled density limit (at ne = 5–6 × 1019 m−3) values of Zeff are ≦1.5. Increases in Zeff of ≦1 have been observed with neutral beam heating of 10 MW. The primary low Z impurity is carbon with concentrations decreasing from ∼10% to <1% with increasing ne. Oxygen densities tend to increase with ne, and at the ohmic plasma density limit oxygen and carbon concentrations are comparable. Chromium getter experiments and He2+/D+ plasma comparisons indicate that the limiter is the primary source of carbon and that the vessel wall is a significant source of the oxygen impurity. Metallic impurities, consisting of the vacuum vessel metals (Ni, Fe, Cr) have significant (∼10−4 ne) concentrations only at low plasma densities (ne <1019 m−3). The primary source of metallic impurities is most likely ion sputtering from metals deposited on the carbon limiter surface.
Physics of fluids. B, Plasma physics | 1990
S.D. Scott; V. Arunasalam; Cris W. Barnes; M.G. Bell; M. Bitter; R. Boivin; N. Bretz; R.V. Budny; C.E. Bush; A. Cavallo; T. K. Chu; S.A. Cohen; P. Colestock; S. Davis; D. Dimock; H.F. Dylla; P.C. Efthimion; A. B. Erhrardt; R.J. Fonck; E. D. Fredrickson; H. P. Furth; R.J. Goldston; G. J. Greene; B. Grek; L.R. Grisham; G. W. Hammett; R.J. Hawryluk; H. W. Hendel; K. W. Hill; E. Hinnov
Measurements of the toroidal rotation speed vφ(r) driven by neutral beam injection in tokamak plasmas and, in particular, simultaneous profile measurements of vφ, Ti, Te, and ne, have provided new insights into the nature of anomalous transport in tokamaks. Low‐recycling plasmas heated with unidirectional neutral beam injection exhibit a strong correlation among the local diffusivities, χφ≊χi>χe. Recent measurements have confirmed similar behavior in broad‐density L‐mode plasmas. These results are consistent with the conjecture that electrostatic turbulence is the dominant transport mechanism in the tokamak fusion test reactor tokamak (TFTR) [Phys. Rev. Lett. 58, 1004 (1987)], and are inconsistent with predictions both from test‐particle models of strong magnetic turbulence and from ripple transport. Toroidal rotation speed measurements in peaked‐density TFTR ‘‘supershots’’ with partially unbalanced beam injection indicate that momentum transport decreases as the density profile becomes more peaked. In hi...
Nuclear Fusion | 1987
M.H. Redi; W. M. Tang; P.C. Efthimion; D.P. Mikkelsen; G.L. Schmidt
Transport simulations of ohmically heated TFTR experiments with recently developed microinstability based, profile consistent models for the anomalous thermal diffusivities, χe and χi, give good agreement with experimental data. The steady state temperature profiles and the total energy confinement times, τE, were found to agree for each of the Ohmic TFTR experiments simulated, including three high radiation cases and two plasmas fuelled by pellet injection. Both collisional and collisionless models are tested. The trapped electron drift wave microinstability model results are consistent with the thermal confinement of large plasma Ohmic experiments on TFTR. It is also found that transport due to the profile consistent model based on toroidal ion temperature gradient (ηi) mode transport can cause saturation in τE at the highest densities comparable to that observed on TFTR and equivalent to a neoclassical anomaly factor of three. Predictions based on stabilized ηi mode driven ion transport are found to be in agreement with the enhanced global energy confinement times for pellet fuelled plasmas.
Journal of Nuclear Materials | 1982
R.J. Fonck; M.G. Bell; K. Bol; K. Brau; R. V. Budny; J.L. Cecchi; S.A. Cohen; S. Davis; H.F. Dylla; R.J. Goldston; B. Grek; R.J. Hawryluk; J. Hirschberg; D. Johnson; R. Hulse; R. Kaita; S. Kaye; R.J. Knize; H. Kugel; D. Manos; D.K. Mansfield; K. McGuire; D. Mueller; K. Oasa; M. Okabayashi; D.K. Owens; J. Ramette; R. Reeves; M. Reusch; G.L. Schmidt
Abstract The PDX tokamak provides an experimental facility for the direct comparison of various impurity control techniques under reactor-like conditions. Four neutral beam lines inject > 6 MW for 300 ms. Carbon rail limiter discharges have been used to test the effectiveness of perpendicular injection, but non-disruptive full power operation for > 100 ms is difficult without extensive conditioning. Initial tests of a toroidal bumper limiter indicate reduced power loading and roughly similar impurity levels compared to the carbon rail limiter discharges. Poloidal divertor discharges with up to 5 MW of injected power are cleaner than similar circular discharges, and the power is deposited in a remote divertor chamber. High density divertor operation indicates a reduction of impurity flow velocity in the divertor and enhanced recycling in the divertor region during neutral injection.
Journal of Nuclear Materials | 1984
R. V. Budny; M.G. Bell; K. Bol; D. A. Boyd; D. Buchenauer; A. Cavallo; P. Couture; T. Crowley; D.S. Darrow; H.F. Dylla; R.J. Fonck; R. Gilpin; R.J. Goldston; B. Grek; W. W. Heidbrink; D. Heifetz; K. P. Jaehnig; D. Johnson; R. Kaita; S. Kaye; R.J. Knize; H. Kugel; B. LeBlanc; D. Manos; D.K. Mansfield; E. Mazzucato; T. McBride; R. McCann; D. McCune; K. McGuire
Abstract A particle scoop limiter with a graphite face backed by a 50 liter volume for collecting particles was used in PDX. Experiments were performed to test its particle control and power handling capabilities with up to 5 MW of D° power injected into D+ plasmas. Line average plasma densities of up to 8 × 1013 cm−3 and currents up to 450 kA were obtained. Plasma densities in the scoop channels greater than 2 × 1013 cm−3 and neutral densities in the scoop volume greater than 5 × 1014 cm−3 were observed. There is evidence that recycling may have occurred in the scoop channels for several discharges with large line-averaged plasma density. At beam powers up to 2.5 MW, energy confinement times above 40 ms were deduced from magnetics measurements and from transport analysis. Pressures in the vacuum vessel were in the 10 −5 Torr range, and recycling source neutral densities in the central plasma were low.
Fusion Technology | 1992
R.J. Hawryluk; D. Mueller; J. Hosea; Cris W. Barnes; Michael Beer; M.G. Bell; R. Bell; H. Biglari; M. Bitter; R. Boivin; N. Bretz; R. V. Budny; C.E. Bush; Liu Chen; C. Z. Cheng; Steven C. Cowley; D. S. Dairow; P.C. Efthimion; R. J. Fonck; E. D. Fredrickson; H. P. Furth; G. J. Greene; B. Grek; L. Grisham; G. W. Hammett; W.W. Heidbrink; K. W. Hill; D. J. Hoffman; R. Hulse; H. Hsuan
AbstractRecent research on TFTR has emphasized optimization of performance in deuterium plasmas, transport studies and studies of energetic ion and fusion product physics in preparation for the D-T experiments that will commence in July of 1993. TFTR has achieved full hardware design parameters, and the best TFTR discharges in deuterium are projected to QDT of 0.3 to 0.5.The physics phenomena that will be studied during the D-T phase will include: tritium particle confinement and fueling, ICRF heating with tritium, species scaling with tritium, collective alpha-particle instabilities, alpha heating of the plasma and helium ash buildup. It is important for the fusion program that these physics issues be addressed to identify regimes of benign alpha behavior, and to develop techniques to actively stabilize or control instabilities driver by collective alpha effects.