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Dive into the research topics where Z. O. Guimarães-Filho is active.

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Featured researches published by Z. O. Guimarães-Filho.


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Reduction of chaotic particle transport driven by drift waves in sheared flows

F. A. Marcus; Iberê L. Caldas; Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; P. J. Morrison; W. Horton; Yu. K. Kuznetsov; I. C. Nascimento

Investigations of chaotic particle transport by drift waves propagating in the edge plasma of tokamaks with poloidal zonal flow are described. For large aspect ratio tokamaks, the influence of radial electric field profiles on convective cells and transport barriers, created by the nonlinear interaction between the poloidal flow and resonant waves, is investigated. For equilibria with edge shear flow, particle transport is seen to be reduced when the electric field shear is reversed. The transport reduction is attributed to the robust invariant tori that occur in nontwist Hamiltonian systems. This mechanism is proposed as an explanation for the transport reduction in Tokamak Chauffage Alfven Bresilien [R. M. O. Galvao et al., Plasma Phys. Controlled Fusion 43, 1181 (2001)] for discharges with a biased electrode at the plasma edge.


Nuclear Fusion | 2008

Chaotic transport in reversed shear tokamaks

F.A. Marcus; T. Kroetz; Marisa Roberto; I. L. Caldas; E. C. F. da Silva; Z. O. Guimarães-Filho

For tokamak models using simplified geometries and reversed shear plasma profiles, we have numerically investigated how the onset of Lagrangian chaos at the plasma edge may affect the plasma confinement in two distinct but closely related problems. Firstly, we have considered the motion of particles in drift waves in the presence of an equilibrium radial electric field with shear. We have shown that the radial particle transport caused by this motion is selective in phase space, being determined by the resonant drift waves and depending on the parameters of both the resonant waves and the electric field profile. Moreover, we have shown that an additional transport barrier may be created at the plasma edge by increasing the electric field. In the second place, we have studied escape patterns and magnetic footprints of chaotic magnetic field lines in the region near a tokamak wall, when there are resonant modes due to the action of an ergodic magnetic limiter. A non-monotonic safety factor profile has been used in the analysis of field line topology in a region of negative magnetic shear. We have observed that, if internal modes are perturbed, the distributions of field line connection lengths and magnetic footprints exhibit spatially localized escape channels. For typical physical parameters of a fusion plasma, the two Lagrangian chaotic processes considered in this work can be effective in usual conditions so as to influence plasma confinement. The reversed shear effects discussed in this work may also contribute to evaluate the transport barrier relevance in advanced confinement scenarios in future tokamak experiments.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Non-linear magnetohydrodynamic simulations of density evolution in Tore Supra sawtoothing plasmas

Timothée Nicolas; R. Sabot; X. Garbet; H. Lütjens; Jean-François Luciani; Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; J. Decker; Antoine Merle

The plasma density evolution in sawtooth regime on the Tore Supra tokamak is analyzed. The density is measured using fast-sweeping X-mode reflectometry which allows tomographic reconstructions. There is evidence that density is governed by the perpendicular electric flows, while temperature evolution is dominated by parallel diffusion. Postcursor oscillations sometimes lead to the formation of a density plateau, which is explained in terms of convection cells associated with the kink mode. A crescent-shaped density structure located inside q = 1 is often visible just after the crash and indicates that some part of the density withstands the crash. 3D full MHD nonlinear simulations with the code XTOR-2F recover this structure and show that it arises from the perpendicular flows emerging from the reconnection layer. The proportion of density reinjected inside the q = 1 surface is determined, and the implications in terms of helium ash transport are discussed.


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Bicoherence in electrostatic turbulence driven by high magnetohydrodynamic activity in Tokamak Chauffage Alfvén Brésilien

G. Z. dos Santos Lima; Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; A.M. Batista; I. L. Caldas; S.R. Lopes; I. C. Nascimento; Yu. K. Kuznetsov

During some discharges in Tokamak Chauffage Alfven Bresilien [R. M. O. Galvao et al., Plasma Phys. Controlled Fusion 43, 1181 (2001)] high magnetohydrodynamic activity may appear with a peaked frequency spectrum. Whenever this peak occurs, the ambient broadband electrostatic turbulence is remarkably modified, synchronizing into the dominant magnetic fluctuation frequency and presenting high bicoherence in the whole plasma edge with a maximum bicoherence inside the plasma. A phenomenological model is introduced to investigate this driven turbulence bicoherence, consisting of nonlinearly coupled phase-randomized drift modes with time-periodic external driving at the dominant magnetic fluctuation frequency. The bicoherence spectrum of this model can mimic features of the experimental results.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Recurrence quantification analysis of turbulent fluctuations in the plasma edge of Tokamak Chauffage Alfvén Brésilien tokamak

Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; I. L. Caldas; I. C. Nascimento; Yu. K. Kuznetsov; J. Kurths

Recurrences are close returns of a given state in a time series, and can be used to identify different dynamical regimes and other related phenomena, being particularly suited for analyzing experimental data. In this work, we use recurrence quantification analysis to investigate dynamical patterns in scalar data series obtained from measurements of floating potential and ion saturation current at the plasma edge of the Tokamak Chauffage Alfven Bresilien [R. M. O. Galvao et al., Plasma Phys. Controlled Fusion 43, 1181 (2001)]. We consider plasma discharges with and without the application of radial electric bias, and also with two different regimes of current ramp. Our results indicate that biasing improves confinement through destroying highly recurrent regions within the plasma column that enhance particle and heat transport.


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Multifractality in plasma edge electrostatic turbulence

C Rodrigues Neto; Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; Iberê L. Caldas; I. C. Nascimento; Yu. K. Kuznetsov

Plasma edge turbulence in Tokamak Chauffage Alfven Bresilien (TCABR) [R. M. O. Galvao et al., Plasma Phys. Contr. Fusion 43, 1181 (2001)] is investigated for multifractal properties of the fluctuating floating electrostatic potential measured by Langmuir probes. The multifractality in this signal is characterized by the full multifractal spectra determined by applying the wavelet transform modulus maxima. In this work, the dependence of the multifractal spectrum with the radial position is presented. The multifractality degree inside the plasma increases with the radial position reaching a maximum near the plasma edge and becoming almost constant in the scrape-off layer. Comparisons between these results with those obtained for random test time series with the same Hurst exponents and data length statistically confirm the reported multifractal behavior. Moreover, the persistence of these signals, characterized by their Hurst exponent, present radial profile similar to the deterministic component estimated...


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Electrostatic turbulence driven by high magnetohydrodynamic activity in Tokamak Chauffage Alfvén Brésilien

Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; Iberê L. Caldas; M. V. A. P. Heller; I. C. Nascimento; Y. K. Kuznetsov; Roger D. Bengtson

In Tokamak Chauffage Alfven Bresilien [R. M. O. Galvao et al., Plasma Phys. Controlled Fusion 43, 1181 (2001)], high magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) activity may appear spontaneously or during discharges with a voltage biased electrode inserted at the plasma edge. The turbulent electrostatic fluctuations, measured by Langmuir probes, are modulated by Mirnov oscillations presenting a dominant peak with a common frequency around 10kHz. We report the occurrence of phase locking of the turbulent potential fluctuations driven by MHD activity at this frequency. Using wavelet cross-spectral analysis, we characterized the phase and frequency synchronization in the plasma edge region. We introduced an order parameter to characterize the radial dependence of the phase-locking intensity.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Stability of the electron-driven fishbone mode

Antoine Merle; J. Decker; Xavier Garbet; R. Sabot; Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; Timothée Nicolas

Electron-driven fishbones provide a good test bed for the linear theory of fast-particle driven instabilities as they exhibit a very high sensitivity to the details of both the equilibrium and the electronic distribution function. Thus, they can help validate the models developed for studying instabilities driven by alpha particles in future fusion reactors such as ITER. The fishbone dispersion relation is extended to properly account for resonance with passing particles by including the contribution of the parallel motion to the resonance condition. Barely passing electrons are found to drive the mode unstable at a lower frequency than barely trapped electrons. Although globally destabilizing, the influence of passing electrons quickly decreases away from the trapped-passing boundary. This is confirmed by an analysis using distributions close to those obtained in electron cyclotron resonance heating experiments. The major effect of this new resonance condition is a reduction of the fast-electron density threshold coupled to a reduction of the frequency of the mode.


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Electrostatic turbulence intermittence driven by biasing in Texas Helimak

D. L. Toufen; F. A. C. Pereira; Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; I. L. Caldas; K. W. Gentle

We investigate changes in the intermittent sequence of bursts in the electrostatic turbulence due to imposed positive bias voltage applied to control the plasma radial electric field in Texas Helimak [K. W. Gentle and H. He, Plasma Sci. Technol. 10, 284 (2008)]—a toroidal plasma device with a one-dimensional equilibrium, magnetic curvature, and shear. We identify the burst characteristics by analyzing ion saturation current fluctuations collected in a large set of Langmuir probes. The number of bursts increase with positive biasing, giving rise to a long tailed skewed turbulence probability distribution function. The burst shape does not change much with the applied bias voltage, while their vertical velocity increases monotonically. For high values of bias voltage, the bursts propagate mainly in the vertical direction which is perpendicular to the radial density gradient and the toroidal magnetic field. Moreover, in contrast with the bursts in tokamaks, the burst velocity agrees with the phase velocity of the overall turbulence in both vertical and radial directions. For a fixed bias voltage, the time interval between bursts and their amplitudes follows exponential distributions. Altogether, these burst characteristics indicate that their production can be modelled by a stochastic process.


Nuclear Fusion | 2009

Temporal behaviour of toroidal rotation velocity in the TCABR tokamak

J. H. F. Severo; I. C. Nascimento; Yu. K. Kuznetsov; R. M. O. Galvão; Z. O. Guimarães-Filho; Fatima Borges; O. C. Usuriaga; J. I. Elizondo; W.P. de Sá; E. Sanada; M. Tendler

A new method for determining the temporal evolution of plasma rotation is reported in this work. The method is based upon the detection of two different portions of the spectral profile of a plasma impurity line, using a monochromator with two photomultipliers installed at the exit slits. The plasma rotation velocity is determined by the ratio of the two detected signals. The measured toroidal rotation velocities of C III (4647.4 A) and C VI (5290.6 A), at different radial positions in TCABR discharges, show good agreement, within experimental uncertainty, with previous results (Severo et al 2003 Nucl. Fusion 43 1047). In particular, they confirm that the plasma core rotates in the direction opposite to the plasma current, while near the plasma edge (r/a > 0.9) the rotation is in the same direction. This technique was also used to investigate the dependence of toroidal rotation on the poloidal position of gas puffing. The results show that there is no dependence for the plasma core, while for plasma edge (r/a > 0.9) some dependence is observed.

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I. L. Caldas

University of São Paulo

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A. G. Elfimov

University of São Paulo

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G. Ronchi

University of São Paulo

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J. I. Elizondo

University of São Paulo

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L. Ruchko

University of São Paulo

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