L. Berzak
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
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Featured researches published by L. Berzak.
Nuclear Fusion | 2009
R. Majeski; L. Berzak; T. Gray; R. Kaita; Thomas Kozub; F. M. Levinton; D.P. Lundberg; J. Manickam; G. Pereverzev; K. Snieckus; V. Soukhanovskii; J. Spaleta; D.P. Stotler; T. Strickler; J. Timberlake; Jongsoo Yoo; Leonid E. Zakharov
Use of a large-area liquid lithium limiter in the CDX-U tokamak produced the largest relative increase (an enhancement factor of 5-10) in Ohmic tokamak confinement ever observed. The confinement results from CDX-U do not agree with existing scaling laws, and cannot easily be projected to the new lithium tokamak experiment (LTX). Numerical simulations of CDX-U low recycling discharges have now been performed with the ASTRA-ESC code with a special reference transport model suitable for a diffusion-based confinement regime, incorporating boundary conditions for nonrecycling walls, with fuelling via edge gas puffing. This model has been successful at reproducing the experimental values of the energy confinement (4-6 ms), loop voltage (<0.5 V), and density for a typical CDX-U lithium discharge. The same transport model has also been used to project the performance of the LTX, in Ohmic operation, or with modest neutral beam injection (NBI). NBI in LTX, with a low recycling wall of liquid lithium, is predicted to result in core electron and ion temperatures of 1-2 keV, and energy confinement times in excess of 50 ms. Finally, the unique design features of LTX are summarized.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010
L. Berzak; A. D. Jones; R. Kaita; T. Kozub; N.C. Logan; R. Majeski; J. Menard; Leonid E. Zakharov
The lithium tokamak experiment (LTX) is a modest-sized spherical tokamak (R(0)=0.4 m and a=0.26 m) designed to investigate the low-recycling lithium wall operating regime for magnetically confined plasmas. LTX will reach this regime through a lithium-coated shell internal to the vacuum vessel, conformal to the plasma last-closed-flux surface, and heated to 300-400 °C. This structure is highly conductive and not axisymmetric. The three-dimensional nature of the shell causes the eddy currents and magnetic fields to be three-dimensional as well. In order to analyze the plasma equilibrium in the presence of three-dimensional eddy currents, an extensive array of unique magnetic diagnostics has been implemented. Sensors are designed to survive high temperatures and incidental contact with lithium and provide data on toroidal asymmetries as well as full coverage of the poloidal cross-section. The magnetic array has been utilized to determine the effects of nonaxisymmetric eddy currents and to model the start-up phase of LTX. Measurements from the magnetic array, coupled with two-dimensional field component modeling, have allowed a suitable field null and initial plasma current to be produced. For full magnetic reconstructions, a three-dimensional electromagnetic model of the vacuum vessel and shell is under development.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008
L. Berzak; R. Kaita; T. Kozub; R. Majeski; Leonid E. Zakharov
The lithium tokamak experiment (LTX) is a spherical tokamak with R(0)=0.4 m, a=0.26 m, B(TF) approximately 3.4 kG, I(P) approximately 400 kA, and pulse length approximately 0.25 s. The focus of LTX is to investigate the novel low-recycling lithium wall operating regime for magnetically confined plasmas. This regime is reached by placing an in-vessel shell conformal to the plasma last closed flux surface. The shell is heated and then coated with liquid lithium. An extensive array of magnetic diagnostics is available to characterize the experiment, including 80 Mirnov coils (single and double axis, internal and external to the shell), 34 flux loops, 3 Rogowskii coils, and a diamagnetic loop. Diagnostics are specifically located to account for the presence of a secondary conducting surface and engineered to withstand both high temperatures and incidental contact with liquid lithium. The diagnostic set is therefore fabricated from robust materials with heat and lithium resistance and is designed for electrical isolation from the shell and to provide the data required for highly constrained equilibrium reconstructions.
Fusion Engineering and Design | 2010
R. Kaita; L. Berzak; D.P. Boyle; T. Gray; Erik Granstedt; G. W. Hammett; C.M. Jacobson; Andrew Jones; Thomas Kozub; H.W. Kugel; Benoit P. Leblanc; Nicholas Logan; M. Lucia; D.P. Lundberg; R. Majeski; D.K. Mansfield; J. Menard; J. Spaleta; Trevor Strickler; J. Timberlake; Jongsoo Yoo; Leonid E. Zakharov; R. Maingi; V. Soukhanovskii; K. Tritz; Sophia Gershman
symposium on fusion technology | 2009
H.W. Kugel; M.G. Bell; L. Berzak; A. Brooks; R. Ellis; S.P. Gerhardt; H. Harjes; R. Kaita; J. Kallman; R. Maingi; R. Majeski; D.K. Mansfield; J. Menard; R.E. Nygren; V. Soukhanovskii; D.P. Stotler; P. Wakeland; Leonid E. Zakharov
symposium on fusion technology | 2009
R.E. Nygren; H. Charles Harjes; Peter Wakeland; R. Ellis; H.W. Kugel; R. Kaita; L. Berzak; Leonid E. Zakharov; Brian Ehrhart
Fusion Engineering and Design | 2010
R. Majeski; H.W. Kugel; R. Kaita; S. Avasarala; M.G. Bell; R.E. Bell; L. Berzak; P. Beiersdorfer; S.P. Gerhardt; Erik Granstedt; T. Gray; C.M. Jacobson; J. Kallman; S.M. Kaye; Thomas Kozub; Benoit P. Leblanc; J. Lepson; D.P. Lundberg; R. Maingi; D.K. Mansfield; S. Paul; G. Pereverzev; H. Schneider; V. Soukhanovskii; T. Strickler; D.P. Stotler; J. Timberlake; Leonid E. Zakharov
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2011
R. Majeski; T. Abrams; L. Berzak; D.P. Boyle; M. Cassin; Erik Granstedt; C.M. Jacobson; R. Kaita; T. Kozub; B. LeBlanc; D.P. Lundberg; M. Lucia; A. Ryou; J. Squire; D.P. Stotler; Leonid E. Zakharov; L.R. Baylor; T. M. Biewer; T.K. Gray; R. Maingi; K. Tritz; C.E. Thomas; V. Soukhanovskii
Archive | 2010
David Michael Sobers; Marcello Lucia; Sophia Gershman; R. Majeski; R. Kaita; L. Berzak; C.M. Jacobson; Thomas Kozub; D.P. Lundberg; Robert Marsala; K. Sneieckus; John G. Taylor
Archive | 2010
Marcello Lucia; Sophia Gershman; David Michael Sobers; R. Kaita; R. Majeski; L. Berzak; C.M. Jacobson; Thomas Kozub; D.P. Lundberg; Robert Marsala; K. Snieckus; John G. Taylor