Subject:
Plasma physics including magnetic confinement fusion, beam plasma and inertial fusion, low temperature plasmas, and basic, space and astrophysical plasmas.
Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN):
JET is the largest tokamak in operation and the main link between smaller machines, where
intrinsic rotation has been mostly studied, and ITER the next step in fusion research. While the
main ion in present tokamak plasmas is a single hydrogen isotope, mainly Deuterium (D) in
JET, future nuclear fusion machines, such as ITER, will operate with a mixture of D and
Tritium (T). Recent experimental campaigns at JET performed a series of experiments with
different hydrogen isotopes, designed to clarify the impact that isotope mass has on physics
questions, and in particular transport and confinement questions, relevant for reliable
predictions for ITER. This talk will report on experiments that studied for the first time the
isotope effect on intrinsic rotation in a tokamak plasma, by comparing rotation measurements
in Hydrogen (H), D and T in Ohmic plasmas. One of the objects of the JET intrinsic rotation
experiments was to study rotation reversals, a puzzling phenomenon commonly observed in
small and medium size tokamaks, where a transition from monotonic to non-monotonic
rotation profiles is observed at a critical density, in some cases leading to plasmas with central
and outer regions flowing in opposite directions. At JET, as the density increased, two
consecutive core rotation reversals were observed. The first, shows a change from peaked co-
current rotation to hollow profiles with the core in some cases counter-current rotating,
similarly to observations in smaller tokamaks. Further increasing the density leads to
restoration of monotonic profiles. The magnitude of the core rotation was found to depend on
isotope type, stronger co-current rotation observed in H. Core counter-rotation was observed
with D and T but not with H. Gyrokinetic calculations, show that the low-density rotation
reversal, for all three isotopes, occurs close to the density of transition from dominant TEM to
ITG instabilities. The type of instability cannot be associated to different directions of core
rotation since for all three isotopes, co-rotation is observed with dominant TEM for the low-
densities and ITG for high-densities. Non-linear modeling of rotation profiles with the low-
flow model show changes of sign in rotation gradient, qualitatively consistent with the
observation of peaked to hollow to peaked profiles as the density increased .These results have
strong implications for ITER, as rotation extrapolations from present day experiments, mostly
based on D plasmas, might not recover in full the physics mechanisms playing a role in
momentum transport.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
Notes:
web site da conferência
https://www.epsplasma2022.eu/
The 48th European Conference on Plasma Physics (2022) will be held as an online meeting from June 27 to July 1 2022 from Maastricht, The Netherlands.
No. of pages:
4