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Dive into the research topics where Michel Tuszewski is active.

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Featured researches published by Michel Tuszewski.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

A high performance field-reversed configurationa)

Michl Binderbauer; T. Tajima; Loren C. Steinhauer; E. Garate; Michel Tuszewski; L. Schmitz; H. Y. Guo; A. Smirnov; H. Gota; D. Barnes; B. H. Deng; M. C. Thompson; E. Trask; X. Yang; S. Putvinski; N. Rostoker; R. Andow; S. Aefsky; N. Bolte; D. Q. Bui; F. Ceccherini; R. Clary; A.H. Cheung; K. D. Conroy; Sean Dettrick; J. D. Douglass; P. Feng; Laura Galeotti; F. Giammanco; E. Granstedt

Conventional field-reversed configurations (FRCs), high-beta, prolate compact toroids embedded in poloidal magnetic fields, face notable stability and confinement concerns. These can be ameliorated by various control techniques, such as introducing a significant fast ion population. Indeed, adding neutral beam injection into the FRC over the past half-decade has contributed to striking improvements in confinement and stability. Further, the addition of electrically biased plasma guns at the ends, magnetic end plugs, and advanced surface conditioning led to dramatic reductions in turbulence-driven losses and greatly improved stability. Together, these enabled the build-up of a well-confined and dominant fast-ion population. Under such conditions, highly reproducible, macroscopically stable hot FRCs (with total plasma temperature of ∼1 keV) with record lifetimes were achieved. These accomplishments point to the prospect of advanced, beam-driven FRCs as an intriguing path toward fusion reactors. This paper reviews key results and presents context for further interpretation.


Fusion Science and Technology | 1986

Review of the Los Alamos FRX-C experiment

Richard E. Siemon; W. Thomas Armstrong; Daniel C. Barnes; R. Richard Bartsch; Robert E. Chrien; J.C. Cochrane; Waheed N. Hugrass; Ralph W. Kewish; Phillip L. Klingner; H. Ralph Lewis; Rulon K. Linford; K. F. McKenna; Richard D. Milroy; D. J. Rej; James L. Schwarzmeier; C. E. Seyler; E. G. Sherwood; Ross L. Spencer; Michel Tuszewski

The FRX-C device is a large field-reversed theta pinch experiment with linear dimensions twice those of its FRX-A and FRX-B predecessors. It is used to form field-reversed configurations (FRCs), which are high-beta, highly prolate compact toroids. The FRX-C has demonstrated an R/sup 2/ scaling for particle confinement in FRCs, indicating particles are lost by diffusive processes. Particle losses were also observed to dominate the energy balance. When weak quadrupole fields were applied to stabilize the n = 2 rotational mode, FRC lifetimes >300..mu..s were observed. Detailed studies of the FRC equilibrium were performed using multichord and holographic interferometry. Measurements of electron temperature by Thomson scattering showed a flat profile and substantial losses through the electron channel. The loss rate of the internal poloidal flux of the FRC was observed to be anomalous and to scale less strongly with temperature than predicted from classical resistivity.


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.


THE PHYSICS OF PLASMA-DRIVEN ACCELERATORS AND ACCELERATOR-DRIVEN FUSION: The Proceedings of Norman Rostoker Memorial Symposium | 2016

Recent breakthroughs on C-2U: Norman's legacy

Michl Binderbauer; T. Tajima; Michel Tuszewski; L. Schmitz; A. Smirnov; H. Gota; E. Garate; D. Barnes; B. H. Deng; E. Trask; X. Yang; S. Putvinski; R. Andow; N. Bolte; D. Q. Bui; F. Ceccherini; R. Clary; A.H. Cheung; K. D. Conroy; Sean Dettrick; J. D. Douglass; P. Feng; Laura Galeotti; F. Giammanco; E. Granstedt; D. Gupta; S. Gupta; A.A. Ivanov; J. S. Kinley; K. Knapp

Conventional field-reversed configurations (FRC) face notable stability and confinement concerns, which can be ameliorated by introducing and maintaining a significant fast ion population in the system. This is the conjecture first introduced by Norman Rostoker multiple decades ago and adopted as the central design tenet in Tri Alpha Energy’s advanced beam driven FRC concept. In fact, studying the physics of such neutral beam (NB) driven FRCs over the past decade, considerable improvements were made in confinement and stability. Next to NB injection, the addition of axially streaming plasma guns, magnetic end plugs, as well as advanced surface conditioning lead to dramatic reductions in turbulence driven losses and greatly improved stability. In turn, fast ion confinement improved significantly and allowed for the build-up of a dominant fast particle population. This recently led to the breakthrough of sustaining an advanced beam driven FRC, thereby demonstrating successful maintenance of trapped magnetic...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

Two-color CO2/HeNe laser interferometer for C-2 experiment.

O. Gornostaeva; B. H. Deng; E. Garate; H. Gota; John Kinley; J. Schroeder; Michel Tuszewski

A six-channel two-color interferometer has been developed for plasma electron density measurements in the C-2 field reversed configuration experiment. A CO(2) laser is utilized as the main probe beams, while copropagating visible HeNe laser beams are mainly sensitive to vibration. Density measurements in C-2 plasmas have shown that this is a reliable turn-key system. The maximum residual phase noise after vibration compensation is less than ±5°, corresponding to a line integral density of 3×10(18) m(-2). The time resolution for routine operation is 2 μs.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Internal magnetic field measurement on C-2 field-reversed configuration plasmasa)

H. Gota; M. C. Thompson; K. Knapp; A. Van Drie; Bihe Deng; R. Mendoza; H.Y. Guo; Michel Tuszewski

A long-lived field-reversed configuration (FRC) plasma has been produced in the C-2 device by dynamically colliding and merging two oppositely directed, highly supersonic compact toroids (CTs). The reversed-field structure of the translated CTs and final merged-FRC state have been directly verified by probing the internal magnetic field structure using a multi-channel magnetic probe array near the midplane of the C-2 confinement chamber. Each of the two translated CTs exhibits significant toroidal fields (B(t)) with opposite helicity, and a relatively large B(t) remains inside the separatrix after merging.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Far infrared laser polarimetry and far forward scattering diagnostics for the C-2 field reversed configuration plasmasa)

B. H. Deng; John Kinley; K. Knapp; P. Feng; R. Martinez; C. Weixel; S. Armstrong; R. Hayashi; A. Longman; R. Mendoza; H. Gota; Michel Tuszewski

A two-chord far infrared (FIR) laser polarimeter for high speed sub-degree Faraday rotation measurements in the C-2 field reversed configuration experiment is described. It is based on high power proprietary FIR lasers with line width of about 330 Hz. The exceptionally low intrinsic instrument phase error is characterized with figures of merit. Significant toroidal magnetic field with rich dynamics is observed. Simultaneously obtained density fluctuation spectra by far forward scattering are presented.


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.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Transport studies in high-performance field reversed configuration plasmas

S. Gupta; D. Barnes; S. A. Dettrick; E. Trask; Michel Tuszewski; Bihe Deng; H. Gota; Deepak K. Gupta; K. Hubbard; S. Korepanov; M. C. Thompson; K. Zhai; T. Tajima; Tae Team

A significant improvement of field reversed configuration (FRC) lifetime and plasma confinement times in the C-2 plasma, called High Performance FRC regime, has been observed with neutral beam injection (NBI), improved edge stability, and better wall conditioning [Binderbauer et al., Phys. Plasmas 22, 056110 (2015)]. A Quasi-1D (Q1D) fluid transport code has been developed and employed to carry out transport analysis of such C-2 plasma conditions. The Q1D code is coupled to a Monte-Carlo code to incorporate the effect of fast ions, due to NBI, on the background FRC plasma. Numerically, the Q1D transport behavior with enhanced transport coefficients (but with otherwise classical parametric dependencies) such as 5 times classical resistive diffusion, classical thermal ion conductivity, 20 times classical electron thermal conductivity, and classical fast ion behavior fit with the experimentally measured time evolution of the excluded flux radius, line-integrated density, and electron/ion temperature. The num...

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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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Houyang Guo

University of California

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