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Featured researches published by N. Yan.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

Fast reciprocating probe system on the EAST superconducting tokamak.

Wenjun Zhang; Jiang Chang; Baonian Wan; Guosheng Xu; C. Xiao; Bo Li; C. S. Xu; N. Yan; Liping Wang; Shaojin Liu; M. Jiang; P. Liu

A new fast reciprocating probe system (FRPS) has been built and installed on the outer midplane of the EAST tokamak to investigate the profiles of the boundary plasma parameters such as electron density and temperature. The system consists of a two-stage motion drive mechanism: slow motion and fast motion. The fast motion is powered by a servo motor, which drives the probe horizontally up to 50 cm to scan the edge region of the EAST tokamak. The maximum velocity achieved is 2 m/s. High velocity and flexible control of the fast motion are the remarkable features of this FRPS. A specially designed connector installed at the front end of the probe shaft makes it easy to install or replace the probe head on FRPS. During the latest experimental campaign in the spring of 2010, a probe head with seven tips, including two tips for a Mach probe, has been used. An example is given for simultaneous profile measurements of the plasma temperature, plasma density, and the plasma flow velocity.


Nuclear Fusion | 2016

First results of the use of a continuously flowing lithium limiter in high performance discharges in the EAST device

J.S. Hu; G.Z. Zuo; Jun Ren; Qingxi Yang; Z.X. Chen; Handong Xu; L. Zakharov; R. Maingi; C. Gentile; X.C. Meng; Z. Sun; W. Xu; Y. Chen; D. Fan; N. Yan; Yixiang Duan; Z.D. Yang; H.L. Zhao; Y. Song; X.D. Zhang; Bo Wan; J.G. Li; East Team

As an alternative choice of solid plasma facing components (PFCs), flowing liquid lithium can serve as a limiter or divertor PFC and offers a self-healing surface with acceptable heat removal and good impurity control. Such a system could improve plasma performance, and therefore be attractive for future fusion devices. Recently, a continuously flowing liquid lithium (FLiLi) limiter has been successfully designed and tested in the EAST superconducting tokamak. A circulating lithium layer with a thickness of <0.1 mm and a flow rate ~2 cm3 s−1 was achieved. A novel in-vessel electro-magnetic pump, working with the toroidal magnetic field of the EAST device, was reliable to control the lithium flow speed. The flowing liquid limiter was found to be fully compatible with various plasma scenarios, including high confinement mode plasmas heated by lower hybrid waves or by neutral beam injection. It was also found that the controllable lithium emission from the limiter was beneficial for the reduction of recycling and impurities, for the reduction of divertor heat flux, and in certain cases, for the improvement of plasma stored energy, which bodes well application for the use of flowing liquid lithium PFCs in future fusion devices.


Nuclear Fusion | 2014

Study of the L–I–H transition with a new dual gas puff imaging system in the EAST superconducting tokamak

Guosheng Xu; L. M. Shao; Shaojin Liu; H. Q. Wang; B.N. Wan; H.Y. Guo; P. H. Diamond; G. R. Tynan; M. Xu; Stewart J. Zweben; V. Naulin; Anders Henry Nielsen; J. Juul Rasmussen; N. Fedorczak; P. Manz; K. Miki; N. Yan; R. Chen; Bingqiang Cao; L. Chen; Lianzhou Wang; W. Zhang; X.Z. Gong

The intermediate oscillatory phase during the L–H transition, termed the I-phase, is studied in the EAST superconducting tokamak using a newly developed dual gas puff imaging (GPI) system near the L–H transition power threshold. The experimental observations suggest that the oscillatory behaviour appearing at the L–H transition could be induced by the synergistic effect of the two components of the sheared m, n = 0 E × B flow, i.e. the turbulence-driven zonal flow (ZF) and the equilibrium flow. The latter arises from the equilibrium, and is, to leading order, balanced by the ion diamagnetic term in the radial force balance equation. A slow increase in the poloidal flow and its shear at the plasma edge are observed tens of milliseconds prior to the I-phase. During the I-phase, the turbulence recovery appears to originate from the vicinity of the separatrix with clear wave fronts propagating both outwards into the far scrape-off layer (SOL) and inwards into the core plasma. The turbulence Reynolds stress is directly measured using the GPI system during the I-phase, providing direct evidence of kinetic energy transfer from turbulence to ZFs at the plasma edge. The GPI observations strongly suggest that the SOL transport physics and the evolution of pressure gradient near the separatrix play an important role in the L–I–H transition dynamics. To highlight these new physics, the previous predator–prey model is extended to include a new equation for the SOL physics. The model successfully reproduces the L–I–H transition process with several features comparing favourably with GPI observations.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2013

Statistical characterization of turbulence in the boundary plasma of EAST

N. Yan; Arne Hejde Nielsen; Gang Xu; V. Naulin; J. Juul Rasmussen; Jens Madsen; H. Q. Wang; Shujie Liu; W. Zhang; L. Wang; Baonian Wan

In Ohmic heated low confinement mode (L-mode) discharges, the intermittent statistical characteristics of turbulent fluctuations have been investigated in the edge and the scrape-off layer (SOL) plasma on EAST (the experimental advanced superconducting tokamak) by fast reciprocating Langmuir probe measurements. Plasma structures (blobs and holes) are observed and found to originate together inside the edge shear layer where the skewness (S) of the ion-saturation current fluctuations is close to zero. The probability density functions of the density fluctuations in edge and SOL plasma show a well-defined parabolic relation between the S and the kurtosis (K). In edge plasma with holes, the geodesic acoustic mode (GAM) is identified with a dominant frequency fpeak ~ 5–7 kHz both in floating potential fluctuations and ion-saturation current fluctuations. However, the GAM can only be detected in the floating potential fluctuations rather than the ion-saturation current fluctuations in the edge plasma with blobs. The ESEL (edge-SOL electrostatic) code based on interchange dynamics is used to simulate the experimental results on EAST. Reasonable agreement between the ESEL simulation and the EAST experiment is reached. Experimentally, the parallel SOL flow shows a remarkable dependence on the plasma density, which resembles the theoretical predicted Pfirsch–Schluter flow but with a much higher magnitude at the outboard mid-plane of EAST.


Nuclear Fusion | 2014

Scaling of divertor power footprint width in RF-heated type-III ELMy H-mode on the EAST superconducting tokamak

Lianzhou Wang; H.Y. Guo; Guosheng Xu; Shaojin Liu; Kaifu Gan; H. Q. Wang; X.Z. Gong; Y. Liang; X.L. Zou; J.S. Hu; L. Chen; Jichan Xu; J.B. Liu; N. Yan; W. Zhang; R. Chen; L. M. Shao; S. Ding; G. H. Hu; W. Feng; N. Zhao; L.Y. Xiang; Y. Liu; Yan Li; Chaofeng Sang; Jizhong Sun; Dezhen Wang; H. Ding; Guang-Nan Luo; Jianing Chen

Dedicated experiments for the scaling of divertor power footprint width have been performed in the ITER-relevant radiofrequency (RF)-heated H-mode scheme under the lower single null, double null and upper single null divertor configurations in the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) under lithium wall coating conditioning. A strong inverse scaling of the edge localized mode (ELM)-averaged power fall-off width with the plasma current (equivalently the poloidal field) has been demonstrated for the attached type-III ELMy H-mode as λq ∝ I −1.05 p by various heat flux diagnostics including the divertor Langmuir probes (LPs), infra-red (IR) thermograph and reciprocating LPs on the low-field side. The IR camera and divertor LP measurements show that λq,IR ≈ λq,div-LPs/1.3 = 1.15B −1.25 p,omp , in good agreement with the multi-machine scaling trend during the inter-ELM phase between type-I ELMs or ELM-free enhanced Dα (EDA). H-mode. However, the magnitude is nearly doubled, which may be attributed to the different operation scenarios or heating schemes in EAST, i.e., dominated by electron heating. It is also shown that the type-III ELMs only broaden the power fall-off width slightly, and the ELM-averaged width is representative for the inter-ELM period. Furthermore, the inverse Ip (Bp) scaling appears to be independent of the divertor configurations in EAST. The divertor power footprint integral width, fall-off width and dissipation width derived from EAST IR camera measurements follow the relation, λint ∼ λq +1.64S, yielding λ EAST = (1.39±0.03)λ EAST +(0.97±0.35) mm. Detailed analysis of these three characteristic widths was carried out to shed more light on their extrapolation to ITER.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

New dual gas puff imaging system with up-down symmetry on experimental advanced superconducting tokamak

S. Liu; L. M. Shao; S.J. Zweben; G. Xu; H.Y. Guo; B. Cao; H. Q. Wang; L. Wang; N. Yan; S. B. Xia; Wuxiong Zhang; R. Chen; L. Chen; S. Y. Ding; H. Xiong; Yanping Zhao; Bo Wan; X.Z. Gong; X. Gao

Gas puff imaging (GPI) offers a direct and effective diagnostic to measure the edge turbulence structure and velocity in the edge plasma, which closely relates to edge transport and instability in tokamaks. A dual GPI diagnostic system has been installed on the low field side on experimental advanced superconducting tokamak (EAST). The two views are up-down symmetric about the midplane and separated by a toroidal angle of 66.6°. A linear manifold with 16 holes apart by 10 mm is used to form helium gas cloud at the 130×130 mm (radial versus poloidal) objective plane. A fast camera is used to capture the light emission from the image plane with a speed up to 390,804 frames/s with 64×64 pixels and an exposure time of 2.156 μs. The spatial resolution of the system is 2 mm at the objective plane. A total amount of 200 Pa.L helium gas is puffed into the plasma edge for each GPI viewing region for about 250 ms. The new GPI diagnostic has been applied on EAST for the first time during the recent experimental campaign under various plasma conditions, including ohmic, L-mode, and type-I, and type-III ELMy H-modes. Some of these initial experimental results are also presented.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Divertor asymmetry and scrape-off layer flow in various divertor configurations in Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak

S. Liu; H.Y. Guo; G. Xu; X. Gao; Sizheng Zhu; H. Q. Wang; L. Wang; N. Yan; Dongsheng Wang; Pengfei Liu; M. Jiang; Wuxiong Zhang; Tingfeng Ming; J. F. Chang; S. Ding; H. Xiong; L. M. Shao; Zhiwei Wu; G.-N. Luo; East Team

Divertor asymmetry and its dependence on the ion ▿B direction has been investigated in the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak by changing the divertor configuration from lower single null (LSN), via double null (DN), to upper single null (USN) during one single discharge. Divertor plasmas exhibit the usual in-out asymmetry in particle and heat fluxes in LSN with the ion ▿B direction toward the lower X-point, favoring the outer divertor, especially at high density. The in-out asymmetry is reversed when changing the divertor configuration from LSN to USN, thus clearly demonstrating the effect of classical drifts. DN exhibits an even stronger in-out divertor asymmetry, favoring the outer divertor. A significant top-down asymmetry is also seen for DN, with greater particle and heat fluxes to the bottom divertor. In addition, the parallel plasma flow has been measured by a fast moving Mach probe at the outer midplane, which shows similar magnitude to the Pfirsch-Schluter flow. Its contribution to th...


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Fast electron flux driven by lower hybrid wave in the scrape-off layer

Yan Li; Guosheng Xu; H. Q. Wang; C. Xiao; Baonian Wan; Zhe Gao; R. Chen; Ling-Jian Wang; Kaifu Gan; J. H. Yang; Xiaotao Zhang; Shaojin Liu; M. H. Li; S. Ding; N. Yan; W. Zhang; G. H. Hu; Y. Liu; L. M. Shao; J.G. Li; L. Chen; Ning Zhao; J. C. Xu; Qingquan Yang; H. Lan; Yang Ye

The fast electron flux driven by Lower Hybrid Wave (LHW) in the scrape-off layer (SOL) in EAST is analyzed both theoretically and experimentally. The five bright belts flowing along the magnetic field lines in the SOL and hot spots at LHW guard limiters observed by charge coupled device and infrared cameras are attributed to the fast electron flux, which is directly measured by retarding field analyzers (RFA). The current carried by the fast electron flux, ranging from 400 to 6000 A/m2 and in the direction opposite to the plasma current, is scanned along the radial direction from the limiter surface to the position about 25 mm beyond the limiter. The measured fast electron flux is attributed to the high parallel wave refractive index n|| components of LHW. According to the antenna structure and the LHW power absorbed by plasma, a broad parallel electric field spectrum of incident wave from the antennas is estimated. The radial distribution of LHW-driven current density is analyzed in SOL based on Landau d...


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

First observation of a new zonal-flow cycle state in the H-mode transport barrier of the experimental advanced superconducting Tokamak

G. Xu; H. Q. Wang; Bo Wan; H.Y. Guo; V. Naulin; P. H. Diamond; G. R. Tynan; M. Xu; N. Yan; Wuxiong Zhang; J. F. Chang; L. Wang; R. Chen; S. Liu; S. Ding; L. M. Shao; H. Xiong; Zhao Hl

A new turbulence-flow cycle state has been discovered after the formation of a transport barrier in the H-mode plasma edge during a quiescent phase on the EAST superconducting tokamak. Zonal-flow modulation of high-frequency-broadband (0.05–1 MHz) turbulence was observed in the steep-gradient region leading to intermittent transport events across the edge transport barrier. Good confinement (H98y,2 ∼ 1) has been achieved in this state, even with input heating power near the L-H transition threshold. A novel model based on predator-prey interaction between turbulence and zonal flows reproduced this state well.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2012

Characteristics of edge-localized modes in the experimental advanced superconducting tokamak (EAST)

M. Jiang; Gang Xu; C. Xiao; H.Y. Guo; Baonian Wan; H. Q. Wang; L. Wang; Linjuan Zhang; V. Naulin; K. F. Gan; Dongsheng Wang; Yanmin Duan; N. Yan; P. Liu; Siye Ding; W. Zhang; Shujie Liu

Edge-localized modes (ELMs) are the focus of tokamak edge physics studies because the large heat loads associated with ELMs have great impact on the divertor design of future reactor-grade tokamaks such as ITER. In the experimental advanced superconducting tokamak (EAST), the first ELMy high confinement modes (H-modes) were obtained with 1?MW lower hybrid wave power in conjunction with wall conditioning by lithium (Li) evaporation and real-time Li powder injection. The ELMs in EAST at this heating power are mostly type-III ELMs. They were observed close to the H-mode threshold power and produced small energy dumps (1?2% of the stored energy). Type-III ELMs produced a time-averaged peak heat flux of about 2?MW?m?2 on the target plate, a value which is ?10 times larger than that of ELM-free phases. A few isolated and large type-I-like ELM events were also observed in EAST with an energy loss of up to 5% of the stored energy. Statistically, the ELM frequencies are several hundred hertz and the frequency appears to decrease with q95, the safety factor at 95% of the flux surface. When an ion cyclotron resonance frequency wave was injected during the H-mode phases, the ELM repetition frequency increased immediately. The frequency and amplitude of type-III ELMs can be effectively influenced by puffing impurity argon gas.

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H. Q. Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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R. Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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L. Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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L. M. Shao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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L. Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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G. Xu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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G. H. Hu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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S. Ding

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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V. Naulin

Technical University of Denmark

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Wuxiong Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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