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Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Sustained rotational stabilization of DIII-D plasmas above the no-wall beta limit

A. M. Garofalo; T. H. Jensen; L. C. Johnson; R.J. La Haye; Gerald A. Navratil; M. Okabayashi; J. T. Scoville; E. J. Strait; D.R. Baker; J. Bialek; M. S. Chu; J.R. Ferron; J. Jayakumar; L. L. Lao; Ma Makowski; H. Reimerdes; T.S. Taylor; Alan D. Turnbull; M. R. Wade; S. K. Wong

Sustained stabilization of the n=1 kink mode by plasma rotation at beta approaching twice the stability limit calculated without a wall has been achieved in DIII-D by a combination of error field reduction and sufficient rotation drive. Previous experiments have transiently exceeded the no-wall beta limit. However, demonstration of sustained rotational stabilization has remained elusive because the rotation has been found to decay whenever the plasma is wall stabilized. Recent theory [Boozer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 5059 (2001)] predicts a resonant response to error fields in a plasma approaching marginal stability to a low-n kink mode. Enhancement of magnetic nonaxisymmetry in the plasma leads to strong damping of the toroidal rotation, precisely in the high-beta regime where it is needed for stabilization. This resonant response, or “error field amplification” is demonstrated in DIII-D experiments: applied n=1 radial fields cause enhanced plasma response and strong rotation damping at beta above the no wal...


Physics of Plasmas | 2001

Active feedback stabilization of the resistive wall mode on the DIII-D device

M. Okabayashi; J. Bialek; M.S. Chance; M. S. Chu; E. D. Fredrickson; A. M. Garofalo; M. Gryaznevich; Ron Hatcher; T. H. Jensen; L. C. Johnson; R.J. La Haye; E. A. Lazarus; M. A. Makowski; J. Manickam; G.A. Navratil; J. T. Scoville; E. J. Strait; A.D. Turnbull; M.L. Walker; Diii-D Team

A proof of principle magnetic feedback stabilization experiment has been carried out to suppress the resistive wall mode (RWM), a branch of the ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) kink mode under the influence of a stabilizing resistive wall, on the DIII-D tokamak device [Plasma Phys. and Contr. Fusion Research (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1986), p. 159]. The RWM was successfully suppressed and the high beta duration above the no wall limit was extended to more than 50 times the resistive wall flux diffusion time. It was observed that the mode structure was well preserved during the time of the feedback application. Several lumped parameter formulations were used to study the feedback process. The observed feedback characteristics are in good qualitative agreement with the analysis. These results provide encouragement to future efforts towards optimizing the RWM feedback methodology in parallel to what has been successfully developed for the n = 0 vertical positional control. Newly developed MHD codes have been extremely useful in guiding the experiments and in providing possible paths for the next step.


Physics of fluids. B, Plasma physics | 1992

Critical error fields for locked mode instability in tokamaks

R.J. La Haye; R. Fitzpatrick; T. C. Hender; A. W. Morris; J. T. Scoville; T.N. Todd

Otherwise stable discharges can become nonlinearly unstable to disruptive locked modes when subjected to a resonant m=2, n=1 error field from irregular poloidal field coils, as in DIII‐D [Nucl. Fusion 31, 875 (1991)], or from resonant magnetic perturbation coils as in COMPASS‐C [Proceedings of the 18th European Conference on Controlled Fusion and Plasma Physics, Berlin (EPS, Petit‐Lancy, Switzerland, 1991), Vol. 15C, Part II, p. 61]. Experiments in Ohmically heated deuterium discharges with q≊3.5, n ≊ 2 × 1019 m−3 and BT ≊ 1.2 T show that a much larger relative error field (Br21/BT ≊ 1 × 10−3) is required to produce a locked mode in the small, rapidly rotating plasma of COMPASS‐C (R0 = 0.56 m, f≊13 kHz) than in the medium‐sized plasmas of DIII‐D (R0 = 1.67 m, f≊1.6 kHz), where the critical relative error field is Br21/BT ≊ 2 × 10−4. This dependence of the threshold for instability is explained by a nonlinear tearing theory of the interaction of resonant magnetic perturbations with rotating plasmas that p...


Physics of Plasmas | 2005

Nonaxisymmetric field effects on Alcator C-Mod

S. M. Wolfe; Ian H. Hutchinson; R. Granetz; J. E. Rice; A. Hubbard; Alan Lynn; P.E. Phillips; T. C. Hender; D. Howell; R.J. La Haye; J. T. Scoville

A set of external coils (A-coils) capable of producing nonaxisymmetric, predominantly n=1, fields with different toroidal phase and a range of poloidal mode m spectra has been used to determine the threshold amplitude for mode locking over a range of plasma parameters in Alcator C-Mod [I. H. Hutchinson, R. Boivin, F. Bombarda, P. Bonoli, S. Fairfax, C. Fiore, J. Goetz, S. Golovato, R. Granetz, M. Greenwald et al., Phys. Plasmas 1, 1511 (1994)]. The threshold perturbations and parametric scalings, expressed in terms of (B21∕BT), are similar to those observed on larger, lower field devices. The threshold is roughly linear in density, with typical magnitudes of order 10−4. This result implies that locked modes should not be significantly more problematic for the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor [I. P. B. Editors, Nucl. Fusion 39, 2286 (1999)] than for existing devices. Coordinated nondimensional identity experiments on the Joint European Torus [Fusion Technol. 11, 13 (1987)], DIII-D [Fusion T...


Physics of Plasmas | 2004

Resistive wall mode stabilization with internal feedback coils in DIII-D

E. J. Strait; J. Bialek; I.N. Bogatu; M.S. Chance; M. S. Chu; Dana Harold Edgell; A. M. Garofalo; G.L. Jackson; R. J. Jayakumar; T. H. Jensen; O. Katsuro-Hopkins; J.S. Kim; R.J. La Haye; L. L. Lao; M. A. Makowski; G.A. Navratil; M. Okabayashi; H. Reimerdes; J. T. Scoville; Alan D. Turnbull; Diii-D Team

A set of twelve coils for stability control has recently been installed inside the DIII-D [J. L. Luxon, Nucl. Fusion 42, 614 (2002)] vacuum vessel, offering faster time response and a wider range of applied mode spectra than the previous external coils. Stabilization of the n=1 ideal kink mode is crucial to many high beta, steady-state tokamak scenarios. A resistive wall converts the kink to a slowly growing resistive wall mode (RWM). With feedback-controlled error field correction, rotational stabilization of the RWM has been sustained for more than 2.5 s. Using the internal coils, the required correction field is smaller than with the external coils, consistent with a better match to the mode spectrum of the error field. Initial experiments in direct feedback control have stabilized the RWMs at higher beta and lower rotation than could be achieved by the external coils in similar plasmas, in qualitative agreement with numerical modeling. The new coils have also allowed wall stabilization in plasmas with...


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2005

ELM suppression in low edge collisionality H-mode discharges using n = 3 magnetic perturbations

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 | 2006

Cross-machine comparison of resonant field amplification and resistive wall mode stabilization by plasma rotation

H. Reimerdes; T. C. Hender; Steven Anthony Sabbagh; J. Bialek; M. S. Chu; A. M. Garofalo; M. P. Gryaznevich; D. Howell; G.L. Jackson; R.J. La Haye; Yueqiang Liu; J. Menard; Gerald A. Navratil; M. Okabayashi; S. D. Pinches; A. C. Sontag; E. J. Strait; W. Zhu; M. Bigi; de M. Baar; P. de Vries; D.A. Gates; P. Gohil; Richard J. Groebner; D. Mueller; R. Raman; J. T. Scoville; W.M. Solomon

Dedicated experiments in the DIII-D tokamak [J. L. Luxon, Nucl. Fusion, 42, 614 (2002)], the Joint European Torus (JET) [P. H. Rebut, R. J. Bickerton, and B. E. Keen, Nucl. Fusion 25, 1011 (1985)], and the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) [M. Ono, S. M. Kaye, Y.-K. M. Peng et al., Nucl. Fusion 40, 557 (2000)] reveal the commonalities of resistive wall mode (RWM) stabilization by sufficiently fast toroidal plasma rotation in devices of different size and aspect ratio. In each device the weakly damped n=1 RWM manifests itself by resonant field amplification (RFA) of externally applied n=1 magnetic fields, which increases with the plasma pressure. Probing DIII-D and JET plasmas with similar ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) stability properties with externally applied magnetic n=1 fields, shows that the resulting RFA is independent of the machine size. In each device the drag resulting from RFA slows the toroidal plasma rotation and can lead to the onset of an unstable RWM. The critical plasma rotati...


Nuclear Fusion | 2001

Resistive wall mode dynamics and active feedback control in DIII-D

A. M. Garofalo; M. S. Chu; E.D. Fredrickson; M. Gryaznevich; T. H. Jensen; L C Johnson; R.J. La Haye; Gerald A. Navratil; M. Okabayashi; J. T. Scoville; E. J. Strait; Alan D. Turnbull; Diii-D Team

Recent DIII-D experiments have shown that the growth of the n = 1 resistive wall mode (RWM) can be influenced by an external magnetic field applied in closed loop feedback using a six element error field correction coil (C coil). The RWM constitutes the primary limitation to normalized beta in recent DIII-D advanced tokamak plasma experiments. The toroidal rotation of DIII-D plasmas does not seem sufficient to completely suppress the RWM: a very slowly growing (growth rate γ<<1/τw) or saturated RWM is often observed at normalized beta above the no wall limit and this small RWM slows the rotation. As the rotation decreases, there is a transition to more rapid growth (γ~1/τw, where τw is the resistive time constant of the wall). The application of magnetic feedback is able to hold the RWM to a very small amplitude, prolonging the plasma duration above the no wall limit for times much longer than τw. These initial experimental results are being used to compare control algorithms, to benchmark models of the feedback stabilization process and to guide the design of an upgraded coil sensor system for stabilization of the RWM at normalized beta values closer to the ideal wall limit.


Physics of Plasmas | 1999

Stabilization of the external kink and control of the resistive wall mode in tokamaks

A. M. Garofalo; Alan D. Turnbull; E. J. Strait; M. E. Austin; J. Bialek; M. S. Chu; E. D. Fredrickson; R.J. La Haye; G.A. Navratil; L. L. Lao; E. A. Lazarus; M. Okabayashi; Brian W. Rice; S.A. Sabbagh; J. T. Scoville; T. S. Taylor; M.L. Walker

One promising approach to maintaining stability of high beta tokamak plasmas is the use of a conducting wall near the plasma to stabilize low-n ideal magnetohydrodynamic instabilities. However, with a resistive wall, either plasma rotation or active feedback control is required to stabilize the more slowly growing resistive wall modes (RWMs). Previous experiments have demonstrated that plasmas with a nearby conducting wall can remain stable to the n=1 ideal external kink above the beta limit predicted with the wall at infinity. Recently, extension of the wall stabilized lifetime τL to more than 30 times the resistive wall time constant τw and detailed, reproducible observation of the n=1 RWM have been possible in DIII-D [Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion Research (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1986), p. 159] plasmas above the no-wall beta limit. The DIII-D measurements confirm characteristics common to several RWM theories. The mode is destabilized as the plasma rotation at the q=3 surfac...


Nuclear Fusion | 2003

Resistive wall stabilization of high-beta plasmas in DIII?D

E. J. Strait; J. Bialek; N. Bogatu; M.S. Chance; M. S. Chu; Dana Harold Edgell; A. M. Garofalo; G.L. Jackson; T. H. Jensen; L. C. Johnson; J.S. Kim; R.J. La Haye; G.A. Navratil; M. Okabayashi; H. Reimerdes; J. T. Scoville; Alan D. Turnbull; M.L. Walker

Recent DIII?D experiments show that ideal kink-modes can be stabilized at high beta by a resistive wall, with sufficient plasma rotation. However, the resonant response to static magnetic field asymmetries by a marginally stable resistive wall mode can lead to strong damping of the rotation. Careful reduction of such asymmetries has allowed plasmas with beta well above the ideal MHD no-wall limit, and approaching the ideal-wall limit, to be sustained for durations exceeding 1?s. Feedback control can improve plasma stability by direct stabilization of the resistive wall mode or by reducing magnetic field asymmetry. Assisted by plasma rotation, direct feedback control of resistive wall modes with growth rates more than five times faster than the characteristic wall time has been observed. These results open a new regime of tokamak operation above the free-boundary stability limit, accessible by a combination of plasma rotation and feedback control.

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M. Okabayashi

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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