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Dive into the research topics where T.K. Gray is active.

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Featured researches published by T.K. Gray.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Analysis of a multi-machine database on divertor heat fluxesa)

M. A. Makowski; D. Elder; T.K. Gray; B. LaBombard; C.J. Lasnier; A.W. Leonard; R. Maingi; T.H. Osborne; P.C. Stangeby; J. L. Terry; J.G. Watkins

A coordinated effort to measure divertor heat flux characteristics in fully attached, similarly shaped H-mode plasmas on C-Mod, DIII-D, and NSTX was carried out in 2010 in order to construct a predictive scaling relation applicable to next step devices including ITER, FNSF, and DEMO. Few published scaling laws are available and those that have been published were obtained under widely varying conditions and divertor geometries, leading to conflicting predictions for this critically important quantity. This study was designed to overcome these deficiencies. Analysis of the combined data set reveals that the primary dependence of the parallel heat flux width is robustly inverse with Ip, which all three tokamaks independently demonstrate. An improved Thomson scattering system on DIII-D has yielded very accurate scrape off layer (SOL) profile measurements from which tests of parallel transport models have been made. It is found that a flux-limited model agrees best with the data at all collisionalities, while...


Nuclear Fusion | 2012

The effect of progressively increasing lithium coatings on plasma discharge characteristics, transport, edge profiles and ELM stability in the National Spherical Torus Experiment

R. Maingi; D.P. Boyle; John M. Canik; S.M. Kaye; C.H. Skinner; Jean Paul Allain; M.G. Bell; R.E. Bell; S.P. Gerhardt; T.K. Gray; M.A. Jaworski; R. Kaita; H.W. Kugel; Benoit P. Leblanc; J. Manickam; D.K. Mansfield; J. Menard; T.H. Osborne; R. Raman; A.L. Roquemore; S.A. Sabbagh; P.B. Snyder; V. Soukhanovskii

Lithium wall coatings have been shown to reduce recycling, suppress edge-localized modes (ELMs), and improve energy confinement in the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX). Here we document the effect of gradually increasing lithium wall coatings on the discharge characteristics, with the reference ELMy discharges obtained in boronized, i.e. non-lithiated conditions. We observed a continuous but not quite monotonic reduction in recycling and improvement in energy confinement, a gradual alteration of edge plasma profiles, and slowly increasing periods of ELM quiescence. The measured edge plasma profiles during the lithium-coating scan were simulated with the SOLPS code, which quantified the reduction in divertor recycling coefficient from ?98% to ?90%. The reduction in recycling and fuelling, coupled with a drop in the edge particle transport rate, reduced the average edge density profile gradient, and shifted it radially inwards from the separatrix location. In contrast, the edge electron temperature (Te) profile was unaffected in the H-mode pedestal steep gradient region within the last 5% of normalized poloidal flux, ?N ; however, the Te gradient became steeper at the top of the H-mode pedestal for 0.8?<??N?<?0.94 with lithium coatings. The peak pressure gradients were comparable during ELMy and ELM-free phases, but were shifted away from the separatrix in the ELM-free discharges, which is stabilizing to the current-driven instabilities thought to be responsible for ELMs in NSTX.


Nuclear Fusion | 2013

Liquid lithium divertor characteristics and plasma?material interactions in NSTX high-performance plasmas

M. A. Jaworski; T. Abrams; Jean Paul Allain; M.G. Bell; R. E. Bell; A. Diallo; T.K. Gray; S. P. Gerhardt; R. Kaita; H. Kugel; B. LeBlanc; R. Maingi; A.G. McLean; J. Menard; R.E. Nygren; M. Ono; M. Podesta; A. L. Roquemore; S.A. Sabbagh; F. Scotti; C.H. Skinner; V. Soukhanovskii; D.P. Stotler

Liquid metal plasma-facing components (PFCs) have been proposed as a means of solving several problems facing the creation of economically viable fusion power reactors. To date, few demonstrations exist of this approach in a diverted tokamak and we here provide an overview of such work on the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX). The Liquid Lithium Divertor (LLD) was installed and operated for the 2010 run campaign using evaporated coatings as the filling method. The LLD consisted of a copper-backed structure with a porous molybdenum front face. Nominal Li filling levels by the end of the run campaign exceeded the porosity void fraction by 150%. Despite a nominal liquid level exceeding the capillary structure and peak current densities into the PFCs exceeding 100 kA m−2, no macroscopic ejection events were observed. In addition, no substrate line emission was observed after achieving lithium-melt temperatures indicating the lithium wicks and provides a protective coating on the molybdenum porous layer. Impurity emission from the divertor suggests that the plasma is interacting with oxygen-contaminated lithium whether diverted on the LLD or not. A database of LLD discharges is analysed to consider whether there is a net effect on the discharges over the range of total deposited lithium in the machine. Examination of H-97L indicates that performance was constant throughout the run, consistent with the hypothesis that it is the quality of the surface layers of the lithium that impact performance. The accumulation of impurities suggests a fully flowing liquid lithium system to obtain a steady-state PFC on timescales relevant to NSTX.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

A dual-band adaptor for infrared imaging

A.G. McLean; J.-W. Ahn; R. Maingi; T.K. Gray; A.L. Roquemore

A novel imaging adaptor providing the capability to extend a standard single-band infrared (IR) camera into a two-color or dual-band device has been developed for application to high-speed IR thermography on the National Spherical Tokamak Experiment (NSTX). Temperature measurement with two-band infrared imaging has the advantage of being mostly independent of surface emissivity, which may vary significantly in the liquid lithium divertor installed on NSTX as compared to that of an all-carbon first wall. In order to take advantage of the high-speed capability of the existing IR camera at NSTX (1.6-6.2 kHz frame rate), a commercial visible-range optical splitter was extensively modified to operate in the medium wavelength and long wavelength IR. This two-band IR adapter utilizes a dichroic beamsplitter, which reflects 4-6 μm wavelengths and transmits 7-10 μm wavelength radiation, each with >95% efficiency and projects each IR channel image side-by-side on the cameras detector. Cutoff filters are used in each IR channel, and ZnSe imaging optics and mirrors optimized for broadband IR use are incorporated into the design. In-situ and ex-situ temperature calibration and preliminary data of the NSTX divertor during plasma discharges are presented, with contrasting results for dual-band vs. single-band IR operation.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

High performance discharges in the Lithium Tokamak eXperiment with liquid lithium wallsa)

J.C. Schmitt; R. E. Bell; D.P. Boyle; B. Esposti; R. Kaita; Thomas Kozub; B. LeBlanc; M. Lucia; R. Maingi; R. Majeski; Enrique Merino; S. Punjabi-Vinoth; G. Tchilingurian; A. Capece; Bruce E. Koel; J. Roszell; T. M. Biewer; T.K. Gray; S. Kubota; P. Beiersdorfer; K. Widmann; K. Tritz

The first-ever successful operation of a tokamak with a large area (40% of the total plasma surface area) liquid lithium wall has been achieved in the Lithium Tokamak eXperiment (LTX). These results were obtained with a new, electron beam-based lithium evaporation system, which can deposit a lithium coating on the limiting wall of LTX in a five-minute period. Preliminary analyses of diamagnetic and other data for discharges operated with a liquid lithium wall indicate that confinement times increased by 10× compared to discharges with helium-dispersed solid lithium coatings. Ohmic energy confinement times with fresh lithium walls, solid and liquid, exceed several relevant empirical scaling expressions. Spectroscopic analysis of the discharges indicates that oxygen levels in the discharges limited on liquid lithium walls were significantly reduced compared to discharges limited on solid lithium walls. Tokamak operations with a full liquid lithium wall (85% of the total plasma surface area) have recently started.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

High density Langmuir probe array for NSTX scrape-off layer measurements under lithiated divertor conditions

J. Kallman; M.A. Jaworski; R. Kaita; H.W. Kugel; T.K. Gray

A high density Langmuir probe array has been developed for measurements of scrape-off layer parameters in NSTX. Relevant scale lengths for heat and particle fluxes are 1-5 cm. Transient edge plasma events can occur on a time scale of several milliseconds, and the duration of a typical plasma discharge is ∼1 s. The array consists of 99 individual electrodes arranged in three parallel radial rows to allow both swept and triple-probe operation and is mounted in a carbon tile located in the lower outer divertor of NSTX between two segments of the newly installed liquid lithium divertor. Initial swept probe results tracking the outer strike point through probe flux measurements are presented.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Particle control and plasma performance in the Lithium Tokamak eXperimenta)

R. Majeski; T. Abrams; D.P. Boyle; E. Granstedt; J. Hare; C. M. Jacobson; R. Kaita; Thomas Kozub; B. LeBlanc; D. P. Lundberg; M. Lucia; Enrique Merino; J.C. Schmitt; D.P. Stotler; T. M. Biewer; J.M. Canik; T.K. Gray; R. Maingi; A. G. McLean; S. Kubota; W. A. Peebles; P. Beiersdorfer; J. H. T. Clementson; K. Tritz

The Lithium Tokamak eXperiment is a small, low aspect ratio tokamak [Majeski et al., Nucl. Fusion 49, 055014 (2009)], which is fitted with a stainless steel-clad copper liner, conformal to the last closed flux surface. The liner can be heated to 350 °C. Several gas fueling systems, including supersonic gas injection and molecular cluster injection, have been studied and produce fueling efficiencies up to 35%. Discharges are strongly affected by wall conditioning. Discharges without lithium wall coatings are limited to plasma currents of order 10 kA, and discharge durations of order 5 ms. With solid lithium coatings discharge currents exceed 70 kA, and discharge durations exceed 30 ms. Heating the lithium wall coating, however, results in a prompt degradation of the discharge, at the melting point of lithium. These results suggest that the simplest approach to implementing liquid lithium walls in a tokamak—thin, evaporated, liquefied coatings of lithium—does not produce an adequately clean surface.


Nuclear Fusion | 2013

Fast-wave power flow along SOL field lines in NSTX and the associated power deposition profile across the SOL in front of the antenna

R.J. Perkins; J.-W. Ahn; R.E. Bell; A. Diallo; S.P. Gerhardt; T.K. Gray; D.L. Green; E. F. Jaeger; J. C. Hosea; M.A. Jaworski; Benoit P. Leblanc; G. J. Kramer; A.G. McLean; R. Maingi; C. K. Phillips; M. Podesta; L. Roquemore; P. M. Ryan; S.A. Sabbagh; F. Scotti; G. Taylor; J. R. Wilson

Fast-wave heating and current drive efficiencies can be reduced by a number of processes in the vicinity of the antenna and in the scrape off layer (SOL). On NSTX from around 25% to more than 60% of the high-harmonic fast-wave power can be lost to the SOL regions, and a large part of this lost power flows along SOL magnetic field lines and is deposited in bright spirals on the divertor floor and ceiling. We show that field-line mapping matches the location of heat deposition on the lower divertor, albeit with a portion of the heat outside of the predictions. The field-line mapping can then be used to partially reconstruct the profile of lost fast-wave power at the midplane in front of the antenna, and the losses peak close to the last closed flux surface (LCFS) as well as the antenna. This profile suggests a radial standing-wave pattern formed by fast-wave propagation in the SOL, and this hypothesis will be tested on NSTX-U. Advanced RF codes must reproduce these results so that such codes can be used to understand this edge loss and to minimize RF heat deposition and erosion in the divertor region on ITER.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2016

Blob structure and motion in the edge and SOL of NSTX

S.J. Zweben; J. R. Myra; W. Davis; D. A. D’Ippolito; T.K. Gray; S.M. Kaye; Benoit P. Leblanc; R. Maqueda; D. A. Russell; D.P. Stotler

Here, the structure and motion of discrete plasma blobs (a.k.a. filaments) in the edge and scrape-off layer of NSTX is studied for representative Ohmic and H-mode discharges. Individual blobs were tracked in the 2D radial versus poloidal plane using data from the gas puff imaging diagnostic taken at 400 000 frames s-1. A database of blob amplitude, size, ellipticity, tilt, and velocity was obtained for ~45 000 individual blobs. Empirical relationships between various properties are described, e.g. blob speed versus amplitude and blob tilt versus ellipticity. The blob velocities are also compared with analytic models.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Preliminary design of a tangentially viewing imaging bolometer for NSTX-U

B.J. Peterson; R. Sano; Matthew Reinke; J. M. Canik; L. F. Delgado-Aparicio; J. Lore; K. Mukai; T.K. Gray; G.G. van Eden; M.A. Jaworski

The infrared imaging video bolometer (IRVB) measures plasma radiated power images using a thin metal foil. Two different designs with a tangential view of NSTX-U are made assuming a 640 × 480 (1280 × 1024) pixel, 30 (105) fps, 50 (20) mK, IR camera imaging the 9 cm × 9 cm × 2 μm Pt foil. The foil is divided into 40 × 40 (64 × 64) IRVB channels. This gives a spatial resolution of 3.4 (2.2) cm on the machine mid-plane. The noise equivalent power density of the IRVB is given as 113 (46) μW/cm2 for a time resolution of 33 (20) ms. Synthetic images derived from Scrape Off Layer Plasma Simulation data using the IRVB geometry show peak signal levels ranging from ∼0.8 to ∼80 (∼0.36 to ∼26) mW/cm2.

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R. Maingi

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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R. Kaita

Princeton University

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A.G. McLean

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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V. Soukhanovskii

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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M.A. Jaworski

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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H.W. Kugel

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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Benoit P. Leblanc

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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Joon-Wook Ahn

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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