Experimental Inference of Particle Transport in Tokamak Plasmas


Book Description

As a whole, this work provides one of the highest-fidelity assessments of cross-field impurity transport in tokamaks, offering the means to extend comparisons between theory and experiments in the particle transport channel.




Cross-field Particle Transport in the Edge of Plasma of Tokamak Experiments and Implications for ITER


Book Description

Particle transport in the edge plasma and scrape-off layer will play a key role in the performance and operation of a tokamak fusion reactor: setting the width of the scrape-off layer density profile and its impurity screening characteristics, regulating the energetic particle fluxes onto first-wall components and associated impurity generation rates, and determining the effectiveness of the divertor in receiving particle exhaust and controlling neutral pressures in the main-chamber. The processes which govern particle transport involve plasma turbulence, phenomena which can not yet be reliably computed from a first-principles numerical simulation. Thus, in order to project to a reactor-scale experiment, such as ITER, one must first develop an understanding of particle transport phenomena based on experimental measurements in existing plasma fusion devices. Over the past few years of research, a number of fundamental advances in the understanding of the cross-field particle transport physics have occurred, replacing crude, incorrect, and often misleading transport models such as the "constant diffusion coefficient" model with a more appropriate description of the phenomenon. It should be noted that this description applies to transport processes in the absence of ELM phenomenon, i.e., physics underlying the "background" plasma state. In this letter, we first review the experimental support for this understanding which is based extensively on data from L-mode discharges and from H-mode discharges at time intervals without ELMs. We then comment on its implications for ITER.




Energetic Particles in Tokamak Plasmas


Book Description

The study of energetic particles in magnetic fusion plasmas is key to the development of next-generation "burning" plasma fusion experiments, such as the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) and the Demonstration Power Station (DEMO). This book provides a comprehensive introduction and analysis of the experimental data on how fast ions behave in fusion-grade plasmas, featuring the latest ground-breaking results from world-leading machines such as the Joint European Torus (JET) and the Mega Ampere Spherical Tokamak (MAST). It also details Alfvenic instabilities, driven by energetic ions, which can cause enhanced transport of energetic ions. MHD spectroscopy of plasma via observed Alfvenic waves called "Alfvén spectroscopy" is introduced and several applications are presented. This book will be of interest to graduate students, researchers, and academics studying fusion plasma physics. Features: Provides a comprehensive overview of the field in one cohesive text, with the main physics phenomena explained qualitatively first. Authored by an authority in the field, who draws on his extensive experience of working with energetic particles in tokamak plasmas. Is suitable for extrapolating energetic particle phenomena in fusion to other plasma types, such as solar and space plasmas.




Theory of Tokamak Plasmas


Book Description

This is a graduate textbook on tokamak physics, designed to provide a basic introduction to plasma equilibrium, particle orbits, transport, and those ideal and resistive magnetohydrodynamic instabilities which dominate the behavior of a tokamak discharge, and to develop the mathematical methods necessary for their theoretical analysis.