S. Spagnolo
European Atomic Energy Community
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Publication
Featured researches published by S. Spagnolo.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Paola Brun; Maria Vono; Paola Venier; Elena Tarricone; Velika Deligianni; E. Martines; Matteo Zuin; S. Spagnolo; R. Cavazzana; Romilda Cardin; Ignazio Castagliuolo; Alvise La Gloria Valerio; Andrea Leonardi
Background Low temperature plasmas have been proposed in medicine as agents for tissue disinfection and have received increasing attention due to the frequency of bacterial resistance to antibiotics. This study explored whether atmospheric-pressure cold plasma (APCP) generated by a new portable device that ionizes a flow of helium gas can inactivate ocular pathogens without causing significant tissue damage. Methodology/Principal Findings We tested the APCP effects on cultured Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Candida albicans, Aspergillus fumigatus and Herpes simplex virus-1, ocular cells (conjunctival fibroblasts and keratocytes) and ex-vivo corneas. Exposure to APCP for 0.5 to 5 minutes significantly reduced microbial viability (colony-forming units) but not human cell viability (MTT assay, FACS and Tunel analysis) or the number of HSV-1 plaque-forming units. Increased levels of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) in exposed microorganisms and cells were found using a FACS-activated 2′,7′-dichlorofluorescein diacetate probe. Immunoassays demonstrated no induction of thymine dimers in cell cultures and corneal tissues. A transient increased expression of 8-OHdG, genes and proteins related to oxidative stress (OGG1, GPX, NFE2L2), was determined in ocular cells and corneas by HPLC, qRT-PCR and Western blot analysis. Conclusions A short application of APCP appears to be an efficient and rapid ocular disinfectant for bacteria and fungi without significant damage on ocular cells and tissues, although the treatment of conjunctival fibroblasts and keratocytes caused a time-restricted generation of intracellular ROS and oxidative stress-related responses.
New Journal of Physics | 2009
E. Martines; Matteo Zuin; R. Cavazzana; E Gazza; G Serianni; S. Spagnolo; M Spolaore; Andrea Leonardi; Velika Deligianni; Paola Brun; M. Aragona; Ignazio Castagliuolo
A source for the production of low-power plasmas at atmospheric pressure, to be used for the nondamaging sterilization of living tissues, is presented. The source, powered by radiofrequency and working with a helium flow, has a specific configuration, studied to prevent the formation of electric arcs dangerous to living matter. It is capable of killing different types of bacteria with a decimal reduction time of 1?2?min; on the contrary, human cells such as conjunctival fibroblasts were found to be almost unharmed by the plasma. A high concentration of OH radicals, likely to be the origin of the sterilizing effect, is detected through their UV emission lines. The effect of the UV and the OH radicals on the fibroblasts was analysed and no significant effects were detected.
Nuclear Fusion | 2009
P. Martin; L. Apolloni; M. E. Puiatti; J. Adamek; M. Agostini; A. Alfier; Silvia Valeria Annibaldi; V. Antoni; F. Auriemma; O. Barana; M. Baruzzo; P. Bettini; T. Bolzonella; D. Bonfiglio; M. Brombin; J. Brotankova; A. Buffa; Paolo Buratti; A. Canton; S. Cappello; L. Carraro; R. Cavazzana; M. Cavinato; B.E. Chapman; G. Chitarin; S. Dal Bello; A. De Lorenzi; G. De Masi; D. F. Escande; A. Fassina
With the exploration of the MA plasma current regime in up to 0.5 s long discharges, RFX-mod has opened new and very promising perspectives for the reversed field pinch (RFP) magnetic configuration, and has made significant progress in understanding and improving confinement and in controlling plasma stability. A big leap with respect to previous knowledge and expectations on RFP physics and performance has been made by RFX-mod since the last 2006 IAEA Fusion Energy Conference. A new self-organized helical equilibrium has been experimentally achieved (the Single Helical Axis—SHAx—state), which is the preferred state at high current. Strong core electron transport barriers characterize this regime, with electron temperature gradients comparable to those achieved in tokamaks, and by a factor of 4 improvement in confinement time with respect to the standard RFP. RFX-mod is also providing leading edge results on real-time feedback control of MHD instabilities, of general interest for the fusion community.
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2009
M. E. Puiatti; A. Alfier; Finizia Auriemma; S. Cappello; L. Carraro; R. Cavazzana; S. Dal Bello; A. Fassina; D. F. Escande; P. Franz; M. Gobbin; P. Innocente; R. Lorenzini; L. Marrelli; P. Martin; P. Piovesan; I. Predebon; F. Sattin; G. Spizzo; D. Terranova; M. Valisa; B. Zaniol; L. Zanotto; Matteo Zuin; M. Agostini; V. Antoni; L. Apolloni; M. Baruzzo; T. Bolzonella; D. Bonfiglio
The reversed field pinch configuration is characterized by the presence of magnetic structures both in the core and at the edge: in the core, at high plasma current the spontaneous development of a helical structure is accompanied by the appearance of internal electron transport barriers; at the edge strong pressure gradients, identifying an edge transport barrier, are observed too, related to the position of the field reversal surface.The aim of this paper is the experimental characterization of both the internal and edge transport barriers in relation to the magnetic topology, discussing possible analogies and differences with other confinement schemes.
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2008
M. Valisa; T. Bolzonella; P. Buratti; L. Carraro; R. Cavazzana; S. Dal Bello; P. Martin; R. Pasqualotto; J.S. Sarff; M. Spolaore; P. Zanca; L. Zanotto; M. Agostini; A. Alfier; V. Antoni; L. Apolloni; F. Auriemma; O. Barana; M. Baruzzo; P. Bettini; D. Bonfiglio; M. Brombin; A. Buffa; A. Canton; S. Cappello; M. Cavinato; G. Chitarin; A. De Lorenzi; G. De Masi; D. F. Escande
Optimization of machine operation, including plasma position control, density control and especially feedback control on multiple magnetohydrodynamic modes, has led RFX-mod to operate reliably at 1.5?MA, the highest current ever achieved on a reversed field pinch (RFP). At high current and low density the magnetic topology spontaneously self-organizes in an Ohmical helical symmetry, with the new magnetic axis helically twisting around the geometrical axis of the torus. The separatrix of the island disappears leaving a wide and symmetric thermal structure with large gradients in the electron temperature profile. The new topology still displays an intermittent nature but its overall presence has reached 85% of the current flat-top period. The large gradients in the electron temperature profile appear to be marginal for the destabilization of ion temperature gradient modes on the assumption that ions and electrons have the same gradients. There are indications that higher currents could provide the conditions under which to prove the existence of a true helical equilibrium as the standard RFP configuration.
Nuclear Fusion | 2011
M. E. Puiatti; M. Valisa; M. Agostini; F. Auriemma; L. Carraro; A. Fassina; M. Gobbin; R. Lorenzini; B. Momo; A. Scaggion; B. Zaniol; A. Alfier; L. Apolloni; M. Baruzzo; T. Bolzonella; D. Bonfiglio; A. Canton; S. Cappello; R. Cavazzana; S. Dal Bello; G. De Masi; D. F. Escande; P. Franz; E. Gazza; S. C. Guo; P. Innocente; G. Marchiori; L. Marrelli; P. Martin; E. Martines
An interesting result of magnetic chaos reduction in RFX-mod high current discharges is the development of strong electron transport barriers. An internal heat and particle transport barrier is formed when a bifurcation process changes the magnetic configuration into a helical equilibrium and chaos reduction follows, together with the formation of a null in the q shear. Strong temperature gradients develop, corresponding to a decreased thermal and particle transport. Turbulence analysis shows that the large electron temperature gradients are limited by the onset of micro-tearing modes, in addition to residual magnetic chaos. A new type of electron transport barrier with strong temperature gradients develops more externally (r/a = 0.8) accompanied by a 30% improvement of the global confinement time. The mechanism responsible for the formation of such a barrier is still unknown but it is likely associated with a local reduction of magnetic chaos. These external barriers develop primarily in situations of well-conditioned walls so that they might be regarded as attempts towards an L–H transition. Both types of barriers occur in high-current low-collisionality regimes. Analogies with tokamak and stellarators are discussed.
Nuclear Fusion | 2009
N. Vianello; E. Martines; M. Agostini; A. Alfier; A. Canton; R. Cavazzana; G. De Masi; A. Fassina; R. Lorenzini; P. Scarin; G. Serianni; S. Spagnolo; G. Spizzo; M. Spolaore; Matteo Zuin
Transport properties of the edge region of RFPs are characterized by complicated mechanisms further entangled by the complex magnetic topology. Recently on RFX-mod (Sonato 2003 Fusion Eng. Des. 66–68 161) the use of an efficient feedback system for MHD control allowed the achievement of an unprecedented plasma current for an RFP, of up to 1.6 MA, with an improvement in the confinement properties. This is accompanied by an amelioration of the magnetic boundary and the observation of different MHD regimes, moving from low current multiple helical regime, to high current quasi-single helical ones. At a low plasma current (Ip ≈ 300–400 kA) in multiple helicity discharge the plasma parameter profiles at the edge are strongly influenced by the presence of m = 0 islands which flatten the temperature profile and modify substantially both the electric drift flow and the E × B shear. The particle diffusion coefficient and the thermal conductivity χe in this regime are 10–20 m2 s−1 and 100–200 m2 s−1, respectively. Both temperature and pressure characteristic scale lengths are found to scale favourably with the decrease in the secondary modes achieved through the increase in the plasma current. The same trend is observed for the thermal conductivity, and the recently discovered single helical axis states (Lorenzini et al 2008 Phys. Rev. Lett. 101 025005) exhibit an edge χe reduced by a factor of up to 40%. Finally the perpendicular flow at the edge is found to scale with the density normalized to the Greenwald density with a saturation at values around n/nG ≈ 0.35.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
S. Spagnolo; M. Spolaore; M. Dalla Palma; R. Pasqualotto; E. Sartori; G. Serianni; P. Veltri
Megavolt ITER Injector and Concept Advancement, the full-scale prototype of ITER neutral beam injector, is under construction in Italy. The device will generate deuterium negative ions, then accelerated and neutralized. The emerging beam, after removal of residual ions, will be dumped onto a calorimeter. The presence of plasma and its parameters will be monitored in the components of the beam-line, by means of specific electrostatic probes. Double probes, with the possibility to be configured as Langmuir probes and provide local ion density and electron temperature measurements, will be employed in the neutralizer and in the residual ion dump. Biased electrodes collecting secondary emission electrons will be installed in the calorimeter with the aim to provide a horizontal profile of the beam.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
M. Dalla Palma; R. Pasqualotto; E. Sartori; S. Spagnolo; M. Spolaore; P. Veltri
Embedded sensors have been designed for installation on the components of the MITICA beamline, the prototype ITER neutral beam injector (Megavolt ITER Injector and Concept Advancement), to derive characteristics of the particle beam and to monitor the component conditions during operation for protection and thermal control. Along the beamline, the components interacting with the particle beam are the neutralizer, the residual ion dump, and the calorimeter. The design and the positioning of sensors on each component have been developed considering the expected beam-surface interaction including non-ideal and off-normal conditions. The arrangement of the following instrumentation is presented: thermal sensors, strain gages, electrostatic probes including secondary emission detectors, grounding shunt for electrical currents, and accelerometers.
Nuclear Fusion | 2010
Matteo Zuin; S. Spagnolo; R. Paccagnella; E. Martines; R. Cavazzana; G. Serianni; M. Spolaore; N. Vianello
First direct experimental evidence of high frequency, high toroidal mode number (n>20), magnetic fluctuations due to unstable resistive interchange modes (g-modes) resonant in the edge region of a reversed field pinch (RFP) plasma is presented. Experimental characterization of time and space periodicities of the modes is provided by means of highly resolved in-vessel edge and insertable magnetic diagnostics. It is found that the spectral mode properties are in good agreement with the predictions of the theoretical linear resistive magnetohydrodynamic stability analysis. A simple model is proposed for the observed saturation levels of the modes.