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Dive into the research topics where Jon Douglass is active.

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Featured researches published by Jon Douglass.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

A new high performance field reversed configuration operating regime in the C-2 devicea)

Michel Tuszewski; Artem Smirnov; M. C. Thompson; T. Akhmetov; A. Ivanov; R. Voskoboynikov; D. Barnes; Michl Binderbauer; R. Brown; D. Q. Bui; R. Clary; K. D. Conroy; Bihe Deng; S. A. Dettrick; Jon Douglass; Eusebio Garate; F. J. Glass; H. Gota; H.Y. Guo; Deepak K. Gupta; S. Gupta; John Kinley; K. Knapp; S. Korepanov; A. Longman; M. Hollins; X.L. Li; Y. Luo; R. Mendoza; Y. Mok

Large field reversed configurations (FRCs) are produced in the C-2 device by combining dynamic formation and merging processes. The good confinement of these FRCs must be further improved to achieve sustainment with neutral beam (NB) injection and pellet fuelling. A plasma gun is installed at one end of the C-2 device to attempt electric field control of the FRC edge layer. The gun inward radial electric field counters the usual FRC spin-up and mitigates the n = 2 rotational instability without applying quadrupole magnetic fields. Better plasma centering is also obtained, presumably from line-tying to the gun electrodes. The combined effects of the plasma gun and of neutral beam injection lead to the high performance FRC operating regime, with FRC lifetimes up to 3 ms and with FRC confinement times improved by factors 2 to 4.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Multi-channel Doppler backscattering measurements in the C-2 field reversed configuration.

L. Schmitz; E. Ruskov; B. H. Deng; H. Gota; Deepak K. Gupta; Michel Tuszewski; Jon Douglass; W. A. Peebles; Michl Binderbauer; T. Tajima

A versatile heterodyne Doppler Backscattering (DBS) system is used to measure density fluctuation levels (in the wavenumber range kρs ≤ 50), and the toroidal E × B flow velocity in the C-2 Field-Reversed Configuration (FRC). Six tunable frequencies in three waveguide bands (26 GHz ≤ f ≤ 90 GHz) are launched using monostatic beam optics, via a quasi-optical beam combiner/polarizer and an adjustable parabolic focusing mirror (inside the vacuum enclosure) achieving Gaussian beam spot sizes of 3-5.5 cm at the X/O-mode cutoff. The DBS system covers plasma densities of 0.8 × 10(13) ≤ ne ≤ 1 × 10(14) cm(-3), and provides access to the FRC core (up to the field null) and across the FRC separatrix into the scrape-off layer plasma.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Magnetic diagnostic suite of the C-2 field-reversed configuration experiment confinement vessela)

M. C. Thompson; Jon Douglass; P. Feng; K. Knapp; Y. Luo; R. Mendoza; V. Patel; Michel Tuszewski; A. Van Drie

Magnetic measurements are a fundamental part of determining the size and shape of field-reversed configuration (FRC) plasmas in the C-2 device. The magnetic probe suite consists of 44 in-vessel and ex-vessel probes constructed using various technologies: ultra-high vacuum compatible mineral-insulated cable, nested triple axis coils hand-wound on ceramic bobbins, and commercial chip inductors mounted on printed circuit boards. Together, these probes measure the three-dimensional excluded flux profile of the FRC, which approximates the shape of the separatrix between the confined plasma volume and the scrape-off layer. High accuracy is achieved by using the extensive probe measurements to compensate for non-ideal effects such as flux leakage through the vacuum vessel and bulk motion of the FRC towards the wall. A subset of the probes is also used as a set of Mirnov arrays that provide sensitive detection of perturbations and oscillations of the FRC.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Enhanced magnetic field probe array for improved excluded flux calculations on the C-2U advanced beam-driven field-reversed configuration plasma experiment

T. Roche; M. C. Thompson; R. Mendoza; I. Allfrey; Eusebio Garate; J. Romero; Jon Douglass

External flux conserving coils were installed onto the exterior of the C-2U [M. W. Binderbauer et al., Phys. Plasmas 22, 056110 (2015)] confinement vessel to increase the flux confinement time of the system. The 0.5 in. stainless steel vessel wall has a skin time of ∼5 ms. The addition of the external copper coils effectively increases this time to ∼7 ms. This led to better-confined/longer-lived field-reversed configuration (FRC) plasmas. The fringing fields generated by the external coils have the side effect of rendering external field measurements invalid. Such measurements were key to the previous method of excluded flux calculation [M. C. Thompson et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 83, 10D709 (2012)]. A new array of B-dot probes and Rogowski coils were installed to better determine the amount of flux leaked out of the system and ultimately provide a more robust measurement of plasma parameters related to pressure balance including the excluded flux radius. The B-dot probes are surface mountable chip inductors with inductance of 33 μH capable of measuring the DC magnetic field and transient field, due to resistive current decay in the wall/coils, when coupled with active integrators. The Rogowski coils measure the total change in current in each external coil (150 A/2 ms). Currents were also actively driven in the external coils. This renders the assumption of total flux conservation invalid which further complicates the analysis process. The ultimate solution to these issues and the record breaking resultant FRC lifetimes will be presented.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

A mass resolved, high resolution neutral particle analyzer for C-2U

R. Clary; A. Roquemore; Jon Douglass; D. Jaramillo; S. Korepanov; Richard Magee; S. Medley; A. Smirnov

C-2U is a high-confinement, advanced beam driven field-reversed configuration plasma experiment which sustains the configuration for >5 ms, in excess of typical MHD and fast particle instability times, as well as fast particle slowing down times. Fast particle dynamics are critical to C-2U performance and several diagnostics have been deployed to characterize the fast particle population, including neutron and proton detectors. To increase our understanding of fast particle behavior and supplement existing diagnostics, an E ∥ B neutral particle analyzer was installed, which simultaneously measures H0 and D0 flux with large dynamic range and high energy resolution. Here we report the commissioning of the E ∥ B analyzer, confirm the instrument has energy resolution ΔE/E≲0.1 and a dynamic range Emax/Emin∼30, and present measurements of initial testing on C-2U.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2011

COMBINED FRC AND MIRROR PLASMA STUDIES IN THE C-2 DEVICE

Michel Tuszewski; Artem Smirnov; Bihe Deng; S. A. Dettrick; Y. Song; R. Andow; D. Barnes; M. Binderbauer; D. Q. Bui; R. Clary; K. D. Conroy; Jon Douglass; Eusebio Garate; F. J. Glass; H. Gota; H.Y. Guo; Deepak Gupta; S. Gupta; M. Hollins; John Kinley; K. Knapp; S. Korepanov; Y. Luo; R. Mendoza; Ales Necas; S. Primavera; E. Ruskov; J. H. Schroeder; L. Sevier; A. Sibley

Abstract The Field Reversed Configuration (FRC) is a high-beta Compact Toroid that includes closed and open field line regions of poloidal magnetic field. Improving the transport properties of both regions is important for the overall FRC confinement and may be attempted in the C-2 device. The goal of this experiment is to explore FRC sustainment by combining heating and current drive from neutral beam injection and particle fueling from a pellet injector. Additions to the C-2 device may include magnetic mirror plugs, plasma guns, and electrically-biased limiters. These additions would permit us to explore combined FRC and mirror physics, with emphasis on improving the FRC confinement.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2013

A High Performance Field-Reversed Configuration Regime in the C-2 Device

H. Gota; Michel Tuszewski; Artem Smirnov; S. Korepanov; T. Akhmetov; A. Ivanov; R. Voskoboynikov; Michl Binderbauer; H.Y. Guo; D. Barnes; S. Aefsky; R. Brown; D. Q. Bui; R. Clary; K. D. Conroy; Bihe Deng; S. A. Dettrick; Jon Douglass; Eusebio Garate; F. J. Glass; Deepak K. Gupta; S. Gupta; John Kinley; K. Knapp; M. Hollins; A. Longman; X.L. Li; Y. Luo; R. Mendoza; Y. Mok

A high temperature, stable, long-lived field-reversed configuration (FRC) plasma state has been produced in the C-2 device by dynamically colliding and merging two oppositely directed compact toroids, with combining effects of biasing edge plasma near the FRC separatrix from an end-plasma-gun with magnetic-mirror-plugs and of neutral-beam (NB) injection. The plasma-gun creates an inward radial electric field which mitigates the n = 2 rotational instability. The gun also produces E×B velocity shear in the FRC edge layer, which may explain observations of improved transport properties. The FRCs are nearly axisymmetric which enables fast ion confinement, and increasing NB power input clearly extends the FRC lifetime. The combined effects of the plasma-gun with mirror-plugs and of NB injection yield a new High Performance FRC regime with confinement times improved by factors 2 to 4 and FRC lifetimes extended from 1 to 3 ms.


international conference on plasma science | 2007

Optical Streak Camera-Based Studies of Wire-Array Z-Pinch Implosion Dynamics on the 1-MA COBRA Pulsed Power Generator

R. D. McBride; K. S. Bell; Isaac C. Blessener; D. A. Chalenski; Jon Douglass; J. B. Greenly; P. F. Knapp; Sergei Pikuz; Tania Shelkovenko; Yu Tao Zhao; Todd Blanchard; A. R. Mingaleev; H. Wilhelm; David A. Hammer; B. R. Kusse; S. N. Bland

Summary form only given. Experimental results showing wire array z-pinch implosions on the 1-MA, 100-ns rise time COBRA pulsed power generator are presented. The principal diagnostic used for these studies was an optical streak camera system, while other supporting diagnostics include a time-gated framing camera, a laser backlighting system, time-integrated pinhole cameras with various filters, and silicon diodes and diamond photoconducting devices for monitoring X-ray production. The data produced by the entire suite of diagnostics is analyzed and presented to provide an overall picture of implosion dynamics and timing on COBRA. In particular, the implosion timing relative to the start of the current pulse on COBRA is compared to that which is predicted by the ablation/implosion model developed for wire array experiments on MAGPIE, a pulsed power generator that has a similar peak current to that of CORBRA, but with a longer, 240-ns rise time.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Field reversed configuration confinement enhancement through edge biasing and neutral beam injection.

Michel Tuszewski; Artem Smirnov; M. C. Thompson; S. Korepanov; T. Akhmetov; A. Ivanov; R. Voskoboynikov; Lothar Schmitz; D. Barnes; Michl Binderbauer; R. Brown; D. Q. Bui; R. Clary; K. D. Conroy; Bihe Deng; S. A. Dettrick; Jon Douglass; Eusebio Garate; F. J. Glass; H. Gota; H.Y. Guo; Deepak K. Gupta; S. Gupta; John Kinley; K. Knapp; A. Longman; M. Hollins; X.L. Li; Y. Luo; R. Mendoza


Nuclear Fusion | 2018

First experimental measurements of a new fast ion driven micro-burst instability in a field-reversed configuration plasma

Bihe Deng; Jon Douglass; T. Roche; E.V. Belova; M. Beall; Michl Binderbauer; R. Clary; S. A. Dettrick; H. Gota; E. Granstedt; S. Korepanov; Richard Magee; Ales Necas; M. Onofri; S. Putvinski; Artem Smirnov; Y. Song; T. Tajima; M. C. Thompson; Michel Tuszewski; A.D. Van Drie; X. Yang; K. Zhai; W. Horton

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Eusebio Garate

University of California

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S. Korepanov

Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics

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Matthew Thompson

University of Colorado Boulder

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R. D. McBride

Sandia National Laboratories

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