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"This seminar presented by J.A. Snipes explores Enhanced Dα (EDA) H-mode features, temperature and density profiles, and edge pedestal diagnostics. Quasi-coherent modes, phase contrast imaging, and EDA operational boundaries are discussed. The study showcases the conditions favoring EDA formation and the challenge of edge gradients on MHD stability. Key findings include the influence of plasma current on pedestal pressure, small ELM characteristics, and the connection between EDA and ELMy H-modes."
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Enhanced Da H-mode on Alcator C-Mod presented by J A Snipes with major contributions fromM Greenwald, A E Hubbard, D Mossessian,and the Alcator C-Mod Group MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center Cambridge, MA 02139 USA Seminar IPP GarchingGarching, Germany7 May 2002
Global Features of EDA H-Mode • EDA H-modes have: • Good energy confinement H89 ~ 2 • Low particle confinement no impurity accumulation • Low radiated power • No large ELMs • Steady State (>8tE) • Obtainedwith Ohmic or ICRF heating, 1 < PRF< 5 MW • Highly attractive reactor regime (no ELM erosion) • Similar to LPCH-mode (JET) and type II ELM regimes A. Hubbard
Temperature and Density Profiles in EDA H-mode • Steep edge temperature and density gradients • Moderately peaked temperature profile• Flat density profile
Quasi-Coherent Signature of EDA H-mode • Enhanced D emission in EDA H-mode • f ~100 kHz Quasi-Coherent density and magnetic fluctuations always found in EDA H-mode in the steep gradient edge • QC mode well correlated with reduced particle and impurity confinement • No large Type I ELMs found on C-Mod • Only small irregular ELMs sometimes found on top of the enhanced D emission M. Greenwald
Edge Pedestal and Fluctuation Diagnostics A. Hubbard
Quasi-Coherent Mode seen in Density Fluctuations in EDA H-modes • Quasi-coherent edge mode always associated with EDA H-Mode • After brief ELM-free period (~20 msec), mode appears • Frequency in lab frame decreases after onset ( ~100 kHz in steady state) • change in poloidal rotation • Reflectometer localizes mode to density pedestal Y. Lin
Phase Contrast Imaging measures kR ~ 6 cm-1 (l~1 cm) • PCI measures k radially at top and bottom of plasma. • for typical equilibria • Frequency range 60-250 kHz • Width DF/F ~ 0.05-0.2 A. Mazurenko
Steady Edge Pedestals in EDA • EDA pedestal characterized by steep pressure gradients • Pedestal parameters obtained from tanh fit to measured Thomson scattering profiles • Moderate pedestal Te (< 500 eV) and high collisionality n* > 2 • Steady-state conditions throughout ICRF pulse • Quasicoherent mode observed by reflectometer channel that views plasma region near the middle of the pedestal D. Mossessian
Conditions Favoring EDA • EDA formation favored by: • Moderate safety factor • q95 > 3.5 in D • q95 > 2.5 (or lower) in H • Stronger shaping • d > 0.35 • Higher L-mode target density • ne > 1.21020 m-3 • Clean wall conditions (boronization) • Seen in both Ohmic and ICRF heated discharges • Seen with both favorable and unfavorable drift direction. M. Greenwald
Higher density at L-H favours EDA Low density, ELM-free Higher density, EDA • Actual threshold may be in neutral density, local ne or gradient or collisionality (all are correlated; n*ped < 1 at low ne, 5-10 at high ne) • 1.21020 m-3quitelow for C-mod. ~0.15 nGW , low ne limit ~0.9 1020 A. Mazurenko
EDA/ELM-free Operational Boundaries EDA favors high q95 > 3.5 1 and moderate edge 150 < Teped < 500 eV ELM-free plasmas are more likely at low q95 and at lower densities and hence higher edge temperatures 0.6 MA < Ip < 1.3 MA 4.5 T < Bt < 6 T 1 MW < PRF < 5 MW D. Mossessian 1 M. Greenwald, Phys. Plasmas 6, 1943 (1999)
EDA/ELM-free Operational Boundaries EDA favors high q95 > 3.5 1 and high edge collisionality *ped > 2 ELMy H modes occupy the same q-n* region as EDA ELM-free plasmas are more likely at low q95 and at lower collisionality Collisionality n*ped calculated on 95% yn (top of the pedestal) D. Mossessian 1 M. Greenwald, Phys. Plasmas 6, 1943 (1999)
Edge Gradients Challenge MHD Limit • Edge electron profiles from high resolution Thomson scattering • assume Ti = Te • Modeling shows gradients are ~30% above the first stability ballooning limit with only ohmic current. • Edge bootstrap current increases stability limit • No Type I ELMs (PRF5 MW, P12 MPa/m) • Small ELMs when bN1.2 D. Mossessian
EDA Pedestal Pressure Increases with Ip • Thomson pedestal electron pressure gradient in EDA increases strongly with plasma current • Dashed curves are J. Hughes
Time evolution of Te, ne pedestals studied using power ramps • RF input power continuously variable, ramped slowly up and down. • Te, ne measured with ms time resolution by ECE, bremsstrahlung array. • Strong hysteresis in net P. • H-mode threshold in Tedge is found. • Te pedestal varies in height and width with P • ne pedestal independent of P (above LH threshold). A. Hubbard
Small ELMs appear at high input power Small, bipolar ELMs in Da at ~ 600 Hz Plasma exhaust visible on divertor probe saturation current ELMs observed in fast magnetic coil signal D. Mossessian
QCM exists at moderate ÑPped and Teped ELMy EDA • When Teped³400 eVbroadband low frequency fluctuations observed in the pedestal region • QC mode reappears when edge is cooled • ELMs replace the QC mode at high pedestal Te D. Mossessian
EDA/ELM-free Boundary in ÑPped vs Teped • QCM is not observed when Te >450 eV • ELMy regime exists in high Te, high Pped region D. Mossessian
Probe Measurements Confirm Mode Drives Particle Transport • Langmuir probes see mode when inserted into pedestal(only possible in low power, ohmic, H-modes) • Amplitude up to ~50% in n, E • Multiple probes on single head yield poloidal k~4-6 cm-1, in agreement with PCI • Propagation in electron diamagnetic direction • Analysis of shows that the mode drives significant radial particle transport across the barrier, G~ 1022 /m2 s • Plumes from probe gas puffs show Er < 0 at mode location.(Er > 0 at larger radii). 1 mm B. LaBombard
Particle Diffusion Increases with Quasi-Coherent Mode Amplitude •Particle source calculated with Lyman- emission, ne(r), and Te(r) • Effective particle diffusion: DEFF = (Source - dN/dt)/ n • As QC mode strength increases: • Deff increases • X-ray pedestal width (~Dimp) increases. M. Greenwald
QCM has a strong magnetic component • Pickup coil added to fast-scanning Langmuir probe. • Frequency of magnetic component is identical to density fluctuations. • implies mode current density in the pedestal ~10 A/cm2 (~10% of edge j). • Mode is only observed within ~ 2 cm of the LCFS • Mode is NOT seen on the wall and limiter coils that are 5 cm outside the LCFS (at least 1000x lower) J. Snipes
Magnetic QCM amplitude decreases rapidly with radius • Scanning magnetic probe nearly reaches the LCFS • Mode decays as • Local QCM kr~1.5 cm-110 cm above the outboard midplane • Differs from Type III ELM precursor kr~0.5 cm-1 seen on the limiter probes J. Snipes
QCM Poloidal Mode Structure Ø Frequency sweeps from > 200 kHz to ~ 100 kHz just after L-H transition ØStrong magnetic component only observed within ~2 cm of LCFS Økr k 1.5 cm-1 ( 4 cm) near the outboard midplane ØAssuming a field aligned perturbation with , k is expected to vary with position as consistent with PCI kR ~ 6 cm-1 along its vertical line of sight near the core J. Snipes
QCM Toroidal Mode Structure Ø QCM is sometimes observed on a toroidal array of outboard limiter coils ØWhen the outer gap 1 cm ØToroidal mode number 15 < n < 18 ØAt q95 = 5, for a mode resonant at the edge this implies 75 < m < 90 which is consistent with <k> ~ 4 cm-1 Toroidal mode number J. Snipes
Comparison with other ‘small ELM’ regimes EDA H-mode shares some characteristics of other steady regimes without large ELMS. • Low Particle Confinement regime on JET • Appears similar to EDA, but not easily reproduced. • Quasi-coherent Fluctuations on PDX • Fluctuations similar to those in EDA, present in short bursts in most H-modes. Coexisted with ELMs. • Type II or Grassy ELMs on DIII-D, JT60U, Asdex UG • Conditions in q, d very similar to EDA • Similar to small ELMs seen in EDA at high bN? • Does a quasi-coherent mode play a role in these regimes? • Quiescent H-Mode on DIII-D • Globally similar, but longer wavelength mode, different access conditions (esp density/neutrals). A. Hubbard
LPCH-mode on JET Similar to EDA EDA H-mode in C-Mod LPCH-mode in JET J. Snipes
Bout Simulations of the QCM X.Q. Xu, W.M. Nevins, LLNL • BOUT simulations find an X-point resistive ballooning mode that • is driven in the edge steep gradient region • has a similar magnetic perturbation amplitude and radial structure as the QCM • has a similar dominant k ~ 1.2 cm-1 at the outboard midplane as the QCM
Physical origin of EDA, fluctuations • Since pedestal profiles are not much different in EDA, ELM-free H-modes, it seems likely to be the mode stability criteria which change with q,d, n* etc. • One possibility is that EDA is related to drift ballooning turbulence. Diamagnetic stabilization threshold scales asm1/2/q. A lower q threshold was found for EDA in H than D. • Initial scalings of QC mode characteristics show • Electromagnetic edge turbulence simulations by Rogers et al have shown a feature similar to QC mode, with . Gyrokinetic simulations of growth rates (GS2 code) are in progress. M. Greenwald
Summary • EDA H-mode combines good energy confinement and moderate particle confinement in steady state, without large ELMs • Edge pedestals have few mm widths, gradients above first stable limit; but stable with bootstrap currents • Quasicoherent pedestal fluctuations QCM in density, potential and B are a key feature of EDA and only occur when: n*ped > 2, ÑPped < 1.2x106 Pa/(Wb/rad), Teped <450 eV • At higher ÑPped, high Teped QC mode is replaced by small grassy ELMs • The observed fluctuations drive significant particle flux • QCM’s are tentatively identified as resistive ballooning modes