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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...


Nuclear Fusion | 2000

Progress summary of LHD engineering design and construction

O. Motojima; Kenya Akaishi; H. Chikaraishi; H. Funaba; S. Hamaguchi; S. Imagawa; S. Inagaki; N. Inoue; A. Iwamoto; S. Kitagawa; A. Komori; Y. Kubota; R. Maekawa; S. Masuzaki; T. Mito; J. Miyazawa; T. Morisaki; K. Murai; T. Muroga; T. Nagasaka; Y. Nakamura; A. Nishimura; K. Nishimura; N. Noda; N. Ohyabu; A. Sagara; S. Sakakibara; R. Sakamoto; S. Satoh; T. Satow

In March 1998, the LHD project finally completed its eight year construction schedule. LHD is a superconducting (SC) heliotron type device with R = 3.9 m, ap = 0.6 m and B = 3 T, which has simple and continuous large helical coils. The major mission of LHD is to demonstrate the high potential of currentless helical-toroidal plasmas, which are free from current disruption and have an intrinsic potential for steady state operation. After intensive physics design studies in the 1980s, the necessary programmes of SC engineering R&D was carried out, and as a result, LHD fabrication technologies were successfully developed. In this process, a significant database on fusion engineering has been established. Achievements have been made in various areas, such as the technologies of SC conductor development, SC coil fabrication, liquid He and supercritical He cryogenics, development of low temperature structural materials and welding, operation and control, and power supply systems and related SC coil protection schemes. They are integrated, and nowadays comprise a major part of the LHD relevant fusion technology area. These issues correspond to the technological database necessary for the next step of future reactor designs. In addition, this database could be increased with successful commissioning tests just after the completion of the LHD machine assembly phase, which consisted of a vacuum leak test, an LHe cooldown test and a coil current excitation test. These LHD relevant engineering developments are recapitulated and highlighted. To summarize the construction of LHD as an SC device, the critical design with NbTi SC material has been successfully accomplished by these R&D activities, which enable a new regime of fusion experiments to be entered.


Nuclear Fusion | 1999

Plasma confinement studies in LHD

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

The initial experiments on the Large Helical Device (LHD) have extended confinement studies on currentless plasmas to a large scale (R = 3.9 m, a = 0.6 m). Heating by NBI of 3 MW produced plasmas with a fusion triple product of 8 × 1018m-3keVs at a magnetic field strength of 1.5 T. An electron temperature of 1.5 keV and an ion temperature of 1.1 keV were achieved simultaneously at a line averaged electron density of 1.5 × 1019 m-3. The maximum stored energy reached 0.22 MJ with neither unexpected confinement deterioration nor visible MHD instabilities, which corresponds to β = 0.7%. Energy confinement times reached a maximum of 0.17 s. A favourable dependence of energy confinement time on density remains in the present power density (~40 kW/m3) and electron density (3 × 1019 m-3) regimes, unlike the L mode in tokamaks. Although power degradation and significant density dependence are similar to the conditions on existing medium sized helical devices, the absolute value is enhanced by up to about 50% from the International Stellarator Scaling 95. Temperatures of both electrons and ions as high as 200 eV were observed at the outermost flux surface, which indicates a qualitative jump in performance compared with that of helical devices to date. Spontaneously generated toroidal currents indicate agreement with the physical picture of neoclassical bootstrap currents. Change of magnetic configuration due to the finite β effect was well described by 3-D MHD equilibrium analysis. A density pump-out phenomenon was observed in hydrogen discharges, which was mitigated in helium discharges with high recycling.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2000

Overview of the Large Helical Device

A. Komori; H. Yamada; O. Kaneko; Nobuyoshi Ohyabu; K. Kawahata; R. Sakamoto; S. Sakakibara; N. Ashikawa; P.C. deVries; M. Emoto; H. Funaba; M. Goto; K. Ida; H. Idei; K. Ikeda; S. Inagaki; N. Inoue; M. Isobe; S. Kado; S. Kubo; R. Kumazawa; S. Masuzaki; T. Minami; J. Miyazawa; T. Morisaki; S. Morita; S. Murakami; S. Muto; T. Mutoh; Y. Nagayama

The Large Helical Device (LHD) experiments have started after a construction period of eight years, and two experimental campaigns were performed in 1998. The magnetic field was raised up to 2.75 T at a magnetic axis position of 3.6 m at the end of the second campaign. In the third campaign, started in July in 1999, the plasma production with ECH of 0.9 MW and auxiliary heating with NBI of 3.5 MW have achieved an electron temperature of 3.5 keV and an ion temperature of 2.4 keV. The maximum stored energy has reached 0.75 MJ with an averaged electron density of 7.7×1019 m-3 by hydrogen pellet injection. The ICRF heating has sustained the plasma for longer than 2 s and the initial stored energy of the NBI target plasma has increased from 0.27 MJ to 0.335 MJ. The major characteristic of the LHD plasma is the formation of the temperature pedestal, which leads to some enhancement of energy confinement over the ISS95 scaling law. The confinement characteristic is gyro-Bohm and the maximum energy confinement has reached 0.28 s. The LHD has also shown its high potentiality for steady-state operation by realizing a 22 s discharge in the second campaign.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 1999

Experiments on NBI plasmas in LHD

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

Neutral beam injection (NBI) heating started in the second experimental campaign of the Large Helical Device (September to December 1998) by two tangential beam lines. With 100 keV hydrogen, the beam port through power of up to 3.7 MW was injected for 1 s typically. The energy confinement was systematically better than that predicted by the International Stellerator Scaling 95 up to a factor of 1.5. The temperature pedestal observed contributes to this enhancement. We have also demonstrated a long pulse discharge by NBI in the LHD. By injecting 0.7 MW of beam, a plasma with a density of 0.3 × 1019 m-3 was sustained for 22 s. A unique oscillating phenomenon of plasma quantities with a long time scale was observed in the long pulse discharge. One of the topics of NB discharge is that the plasma can be started up by NB alone. This technique is unique for helical systems that have a vacuum magnetic field confining high energy ions, and it is useful for helical systems to be free from the constraint of magnetic field strength that must coincide with the frequency required by electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECH).


Nuclear Fusion | 2000

Overview of long pulse operation in the Large Helical Device

M. Fujiwara; Y. Takeiri; T. Shimozuma; T. Mutoh; Y. Nakamura; S. Yamada; S. Sudo; K. Kawahata; Y. Oka; M. Sato; N. Noda; A. Iiyoshi; K. Adachi; Kenya Akaishi; N. Ashikawa; H. Chikaraishi; P. de Vries; M. Emoto; H. Funaba; M. Goto; K. Ida; H. Idei; K. Ikeda; S. Imagawa; S. Inagaki; M. Isobe; A. Iwamoto; S. Kado; O. Kaneko; S. Kitagawa

The Large Helical Device is the worlds largest heliotron type helical system, with the plasma confining magnetic field being generated by only external superconducting coils. One of the main objectives of the LHD project is to sustain high temperature plasmas for a long time in steady state. The plasma vacuum vessel and the divertor are water cooled, and a heat load of 3 MW can be removed continuously. The NBI, ECH and ICRF heating systems, diagnostic instruments and data acquisition system are designed for long pulse operation. The present status of these systems and the recent experimental results of long pulse operation are reviewed. A steady state discharge with NBI was obtained for 35 s. The ECH discharge duration was extended to 120 s with a duty factor of 95%. Plasma sustainment by ICRF alone was achieved for 2 s. The performance of these long pulse operations is summarized.


ieee npss symposium on fusion engineering | 1997

Control and communication system for plasma heating unit of Large Helical Device

C. Takahashi; R. Akiyama; F. Shimbo; K. Haba; Y. Takita; E. Asano; Goro Nomura; S. Ito; T. Kohmoto; Y. Taniguchi; H. Ogawa; N. Yamamoto; T. Mutoh; S. Kubo; H. Idei; Yasuhiko Takeiri; O. Kaneko; K.Y. Watanabe; H. Yamada; K. Yamazaki; K. Murai; O. Motojima; T. Watari

Development of the control and communication system for the plasma heating unit of Large Helical Device (LHD: an experimental machine for fusion science) has been continued. The system is composed of a distributed and concurrent client/server system by the use of several UNIX workstations, and its sub-systems are controlled by PLC (Programmable Logic Controller), VME (Versa Module Europe). Almost all of its control system are connected via Ethernet with IEEE802.3. Man-machine interface system and hardware/software of the control system have been completed.


Nuclear Fusion | 1999

Overview of the Large Helical Device project

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


Research Report NIFS-Series | 1998

An Overview of the Large Helical Device Project

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

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H. Funaba

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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J. Miyazawa

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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M. Emoto

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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M. Goto

Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute

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