Abstract (EN):
Plasma rotation has an important play in stabilization of MHD modes and reducing turbulent
transport of particles and energy. Because in fusion reactors it is expected the torque provided by
external sources will be small, the intrinsic (or spontaneous) rotation is of great interest[1, 2, 3].
Furthermore, the origin and physics of plasma rotation is also an important issue by itself.
The behavior of the intrinsic toroidal rotation during the growth and saturation of m/n =
2/1 magnetic islands, triggered by programmed density ramp up, has been investigated in Lmode
ohmic discharges in the TCABR tokamak. In those discharges R = 0.61 m, a = 0.18 m,
Ip ¿ 80 kA, Bt = 1.07 T, q(a) ¿ 3.5 and the toroidal spontaneous rotation of the plasma core
is in the counter-current direction. The results show that the plasma is accelerated as the island
starts to grow, while the island frequency slows down. And, as the island saturates, the toroidal
rotation decreases quite rapidly (faster than the island), and the discharge is followed by a major
disruption. In some discharges, where the density decreases after the island saturation (and thus,
avoiding the plasma disruption), the MHD instability becomes smaller until it vanishes, and the
toroidal rotation slows down to its original value before the gas injection.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
Notes:
Artigo "online" em: http://ocs.ciemat.es/EPS2015PAP/pdf/P2.146.pdf
No. of pages:
4
License type: