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Featured researches published by H. Idei.


Physics of Plasmas | 1999

Initial physics achievements of large helical device experiments

O. Motojima; H. Yamada; A. Komori; N. Ohyabu; K. Kawahata; O. Kaneko; S. Masuzaki; A. Ejiri; M. Emoto; H. Funaba; M. Goto; K. Ida; H. Idei; S. Inagaki; N. Inoue; S. Kado; S. Kubo; R. Kumazawa; T. Minami; J. Miyazawa; T. Morisaki; S. Morita; S. Murakami; S. Muto; T. Mutoh; Y. Nagayama; Y. Nakamura; H. Nakanishi; K. Narihara; K. Nishimura

The Large Helical Device (LHD) experiments [O. Motojima, et al., Proceedings, 16th Conference on Fusion Energy, Montreal, 1996 (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1997), Vol. 3, p. 437] have started this year after a successful eight-year construction and test period of the fully superconducting facility. LHD investigates a variety of physics issues on large scale heliotron plasmas (R=3.9 m, a=0.6 m), which stimulates efforts to explore currentless and disruption-free steady plasmas under an optimized configuration. A magnetic field mapping has demonstrated the nested and healthy structure of magnetic surfaces, which indicates the successful completion of the physical design and the effectiveness of engineering quality control during the fabrication. Heating by 3 MW of neutral beam injection (NBI) has produced plasmas with a fusion triple product of 8×1018 keV m−3 s at a magnetic field of 1.5 T. An electron temperature of 1.5 keV and an ion temperature of 1.4 keV have been achieved. The maximum s...


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2001

Configuration flexibility and extended regimes in Large Helical Device

H. Yamada; A. Komori; N. Ohyabu; O. Kaneko; K. Kawahata; K.Y. Watanabe; S. Sakakibara; S. Murakami; K. Ida; R. Sakamoto; Y. Liang; J. Miyazawa; Kenji Tanaka; Y. Narushima; S. Morita; S. Masuzaki; T. Morisaki; N. Ashikawa; L. R. Baylor; W.A. Cooper; M. Emoto; P.W. Fisher; H. Funaba; M. Goto; H. Idei; K. Ikeda; S. Inagaki; N. Inoue; M. Isobe; K. Khlopenkov

Recent experimental results in the Large Helical Device have indicated that a large pressure gradient can be formed beyond the stability criterion for the Mercier (high-n) mode. While the stability against an interchange mode is violated in the inward-shifted configuration due to an enhancement of the magnetic hill, the neoclassical transport and confinement of high-energy particle are, in contrast, improved by this inward shift. Mitigation of the unfavourable effects of MHD instability has led to a significant extension of the operational regime. Achievements of the stored energy of I MJ and the volume-averaged beta of 3% are representative results from this finding. A confinement enhancement factor above the international stellarator scaling ISS95 is also maintained around 1.5 towards a volume-averaged beta, (beta), of 3%. Configuration studies on confinement and MHD characteristics emphasize the superiority of the inward-shifted geometry to other geometries. The emergence of coherent modes appears to be consistent with the linear ideal MHD theory; however, the inward-shifted configuration has reduced heat transport in spite of a larger amplitude of magnetic fluctuation than the outward-shifted configuration. While neoclassical helical ripple transport becomes visible for the outward-shifted configuration in the collisionless regime, the inward-shifted configuration does not show any degradation of confinement deep in the collisionless regime (nu* < 0.1). The distinguished characteristics observed in the inward-shifted configuration help in creating a new perspective of MHD stability and related transport in net current-free plasmas. The first result of the pellet launching at different locations is also reported.


International Journal of Infrared and Millimeter Waves | 1997

Coupling of tilting Gaussian beam with hybrid mode in the corrugated waveguide

K. Ohkubo; S. Kubo; H. Idei; M. Sato; T. Shimozuma; Y. Takita

The mode-conversion loss in the matching between the gaussian beam emanated from the gyrotron and the hybrid mode in the circular corrugated waveguide with the diameter of 2a is discussed. By numerical calculation, it is found that the loss considerably increases and optimum waist sizew0 changes when TEM00 mode with the wavelength λ is injected with offset or tilt. By fitting numerical data to the polynomial function, it becomes evident that the scaling formulas of the losses for the off-axis shiftrd and for the tilt angle θ are derived to be 2.3(rd/a)2 – 2.2(rd/a)4 and 3.9(aα/λ)2 – 5.6(aθ/λ)4 for fixedw0/a=0.643, respectively. To keep the mode-conversion loss ≤1% for the frequency of 168 GHz and 2a=88.9 mm, tilting angle and offset should be less than 0.1 degrees and 2.9 mm, respectively.


Journal of Fusion Energy | 1996

Large Helical Device (LHD) program

M. Fujiwara; K. Yamazaki; M. Okamoto; J. Todoroki; T. Amano; T. Watanabe; T. Hayashi; Heiji Sanuki; Noriyoshi Nakajima; Kimitaka Itoh; H. Sugama; K. Ichiguchi; S. Murakami; O. Motojima; J. Yamamoto; T. Satow; N. Yanagi; S. Imagawa; K. Takahata; H. Tamura; A. Nishimura; A. Komori; N. Inoue; N. Noda; A. Sagara; Y. Kubota; N. Akaishi; S. Satoh; S. Tanahashi; H. Chikaraishi

The largest superconducting fusion machine, Large Helical Device (LHD), is now under construction in Japan and will begin operation in 1997. Design and construction of related R&D programs are now being carried out. The major radius of this machine is 3.9 m and the magnetic field on the plasma center is 3 T. The NbTi superconducting conductors are used in both helical coils and poloidal coils to produce this field. This will be upgraded in the second phase a using superfluid coil cooling technique. A negative ion source is being successfully developed for the NBI heating of LHD. This paper describes the present status and progress in its experimental planning and theoretical analysis on LHD, and the design and construction of LHD torus, heating, and diagnostics equipments.


Physics of Plasmas | 2003

Formation of electron internal transport barrier and achievement of high ion temperature in Large Helical Device

Y. Takeiri; T. Shimozuma; S. Kubo; S. Morita; M. Osakabe; O. Kaneko; K. Tsumori; Y. Oka; K. Ikeda; K. Nagaoka; N. Ohyabu; K. Ida; M. Yokoyama; J. Miyazawa; M. Goto; K. Narihara; I. Yamada; H. Idei; Y. Yoshimura; N. Ashikawa; M. Emoto; H. Funaba; S. Inagaki; M. Isobe; K. Kawahata; K. Khlopenkov; T. Kobuchi; A. Komori; A. Kostrioukov; R. Kumazawa

An internal transport barrier (ITB) was observed in the electron temperature profile in the Large Helical Device [O. Motojima et al., Phys. Plasmas 6, 1843 (1999)] with a centrally focused intense electron cyclotron resonance microwave heating. Inside the ITB the core electron transport was improved, and a high electron temperature, exceeding 10 keV in a low density, was achieved in a collisionless regime. The formation of the electron-ITB is correlated with the neoclassical electron root with a strong radial electric field determined by the neoclassical ambipolar flux. The direction of the tangentially injected beam-driven current has an influence on the electron-ITB formation. For the counter-injected target plasma, a steeper temperature gradient, than that for the co-injected one, was observed. As for the ion temperature, high-power NBI (neutral beam injection) heating of 9 MW has realized a central ion temperature of 5 keV with neon injection. By introducing neon gas, the NBI absorption power was incr...


Nuclear Fusion | 2001

Energy confinement and thermal transport characteristics of net current free plasmas in the Large Helical Device

H. Yamada; K.Y. Watanabe; K. Yamazaki; S. Murakami; S. Sakakibara; K. Narihara; Kenji Tanaka; M. Osakabe; K. Ida; N. Ashikawa; P. de Vries; M. Emoto; H. Funaba; M. Goto; H. Idei; K. Ikeda; S. Inagaki; N. Inoue; M. Isobe; S. Kado; O. Kaneko; K. Kawahata; K. Khlopenkov; T. Kobuchi; A. Komori; S. Kubo; R. Kumazawa; Y. Liang; S. Masuzaki; T. Minami

The energy confinement and thermal transport characteristics of net current free plasmas in regimes with much smaller gyroradii and collisionality than previously studied have been investigated in the Large Helical Device (LHD). The inward shifted configuration, which is superior from the point of view of neoclassical transport theory, has revealed a systematic confinement improvement over the standard configuration. Energy confinement times are improved over the International Stellarator Scaling 95 by a factor of 1.6 ± 0.2 for an inward shifted configuration. This enhancement is primarily due to the broad temperature profile with a high edge value. A simple dimensional analysis involving LHD and other medium sized heliotrons yields a strongly gyro-Bohm dependence (T E Ω ρ *-3.8 ) of energy confinement times. It should be noted that this result is attributed to a comprehensive treatment of LHD for systematic confinement enhancement and that the medium sized heliotrons have narrow temperature profiles. The core stored energy still indicates a dependence of T E Ω ρ *-2.6 when data only from LIED are processed. The local heat transport analysis of discharges dimensionally similar except for ρ * suggests that the heat conduction coefficient lies between Bohm and gyro-Bohm in the core and changes towards strong gyro-Bohm in the peripheral region. Since the inward shifted configuration has a geometrical feature suppressing neoclassical transport, confinement improvement can be maintained in the collisionless regime where ripple transport is important. The stiffness of the pressure profile coincides with enhanced transport in the peaked density profile obtained by pellet injection.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2003

Formation of electron internal transport barriers by highly localized electron cyclotron resonance heating in the large helical device

T. Shimozuma; S. Kubo; H. Idei; Y. Yoshimura; T. Notake; K. Ida; N. Ohyabu; I. Yamada; K. Narihara; S. Inagaki; Y. Nagayama; Y. Takeiri; H. Funaba; S. Muto; Kenji Tanaka; M. Yokoyama; S. Murakami; M. Osakabe; R. Kumazawa; N. Ashikawa; M. Emoto; M. Goto; K. Ikeda; M. Isobe; T Kobichi; Y. Liang; S. Masuzaki; T. Minami; J. Miyazawa; S. Morita

Internal transport barriers with respect to electron thermal transport (eITB) were observed in the large helical device, when the electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECH) power was highly localized on the centre of a plasma sustained by neutral beam injection. The eITB is characterized by a high central electron temperature of 6–8 keV with an extremely steep gradient, as high as 55 keV m−1 and a low electron thermal diffusivity within a normalized average radius ρ≈0.3 as well as by the existence of clear thresholds for the ECH power and plasma collisionality.


Nuclear Fusion | 2001

MHD characteristics in the high beta regime of the Large Helical Device

S. Sakakibara; H. Yamada; K.Y. Watanabe; Y. Narushima; K. Toi; S. Ohdachi; M. Takechi; Satoshi Yamamoto; K. Narihara; Kenji Tanaka; N. Ashikawa; P. de Vries; M. Emoto; H. Funaba; M. Goto; K. Ida; H. Idei; K. Ikeda; S. Inagaki; N. Inoue; M. Isobe; S. Kado; O. Kaneko; K. Kawahata; K. Khlopenkov; T. Kobuchi; A. Komori; S. Kubo; R. Kumazawa; Y. Liang

Note: Proc. 18th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference, Sorrento, Italy, 4-10 October 2000, IAEA-CN-77 (EXP3/12), p. 157 (2000) Reference CRPP-CONF-2000-073 Record created on 2008-05-13, modified on 2017-05-12


Nuclear Fusion | 1999

Confinement physics study in a small low aspect ratio helical device: CHS

S. Okamura; K. Matsuoka; R. Akiyama; D. S. Darrow; A. Ejiri; A. Fujisawa; M. Fujiwara; M. Goto; K. Ida; H. Idei; H. Iguchi; N. Inoue; M. Isobe; K. Itoh; S. Kado; K. Khlopenkov; T. Kondo; S. Kubo; A. Lazaros; S. Lee; G. Matsunaga; T. Minami; S. Morita; S. Murakami; Noriyoshi Nakajima; N. Nikai; S. Nishimura; I. Nomura; S. Ohdachi; K. Ohkuni

Variation of the plasma position relative to the centre of the helical coil winding is a very effective means of controlling the MHD stability and the trapped particle confinement in heliotron/torsatron systems, but improving one of these two characteristics with this parameter simultaneously has a detrimental effect on the other. The inward shifted configuration is favourable for drift orbit optimization but is predicted to be unstable according to the Mercier criterion. Various physics problems, such as electric field structure, plasma rotation and MHD phenomena, have been studied in the Compact Helical System (CHS) with a compromise intermediate position. With this standard configuration, CHS has yielded experimental results that contribute to the understanding of general toroidal confinement physics and low aspect ratio helical systems. In the recent experiments, it was found that a wide range of inward shifted configurations give stable plasma discharges without any restriction to the special pressure profile. Such an enhanced range of operation made it possible to study experimentally the drift orbit optimized configuration in heliotron/torsatron systems. The effect of configuration improvement was studied with plasmas in a low collisionality regime.


Nuclear Fusion | 2001

Impact of pellet injection on extension of the operational region in LHD

R. Sakamoto; H. Yamada; Kenji Tanaka; K. Narihara; S. Morita; S. Sakakibara; S. Masuzaki; S. Inagaki; L. R. Baylor; P.W. Fisher; S.K. Combs; M.J. Gouge; S. Kato; A. Komori; O. Kaneko; N. Ashikawa; P. de Vries; M. Emoto; H. Funaba; M. Goto; K. Ida; H. Idei; K. Ikeda; M. Isobe; S. Kado; K. Kawahata; K. Khlopenkov; S. Kubo; R. Kumazawa; T. Minami

Pellet injection has been used as a primary fuelling scheme in the Large Helical Device. With pellet injection, the operational region of NBI plasmas has been extended to higher densities while maintaining a favourable dependence of energy confinement on density, and several important values, such as plasma stored energy of 0.88?MJ, energy confinement time of 0.3?s, ? of 2.4% at 1.3?T and density of 1.1 ? 1020?m -3, have been achieved. These parameters cannot be attained by gas puffing. Ablation and the subsequent behaviour of the plasma have been investigated. The measured pellet penetration depth estimated on the basis of the duration of the H? emission is shallower than the depth predicted from the simple neutral gas shielding (NGS) model. It can be explained by the NGS model with inclusion of the effect of fast ions on the ablation. Just after ablation, the redistribution of the ablated pellet mass was observed on a short timescale (~400?ms). The redistribution causes shallow deposition and low fuelling efficiency.

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Y. Yoshimura

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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