Identification of new turbulence contributions to plasma transport and confinement in spherical tokamak regime
Authors: W. X. Wang, S. Ethier, Y. Ren, S. Kaye,
J. Chen, E. Startsev
, Z. Lu
, Z. Q. Li
Abstract: Highly distinct features of spherical
tokamaks (ST), such as NSTX and NSTX-U, result in a different
fusion plasma regime with unique physics properties compared to
conventional tokamaks. Nonlinear global gyrokinetic
simulations critical for addressing turbulence and transport
physics in the ST regime have led to new insights. The drift wave
Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability characterized by intrinsic mode
asymmetry is identified in strongly rotating NSTX L-mode
plasmas. While the strong E x B shear associated with the
rotation leads to a reduction in KH/ITG turbulence, the remaining
fluctuations can produce a significant ion thermal transport that
is comparable to the experimental level in the outer core region
(with no "transport shortfall"). The other new, important
turbulence source identified in NSTX is the dissipative trapped
electron mode (DTEM), which is believed to play little role in
conventional tokamak regime. Due to the high fraction of trapped
electrons, long wavelength DTEMs peaking around kθPs
∼ 0.1 are destabilized in NSTX collisionality regime by
electron density and temperature gradients achieved there.
Surprisingly, the E x B shear stabilization effect on DTEM is
remarkably weak, which makes it a major turbulence source in the
ST regime dominant over collisionless TEM (CTEM). The latter, on
the other hand, is subject to strong collisional and ExB shear
suppression in NSTX. DTEM is shown to produce significant
particle, energy and toroidal momentum transport, in agreement
with experimental levels in NSTX H-modes. Moreover, DTEM-driven
transport in NSTX parametric regime is found to increase with
electron collision frequency, providing one possible source for
the scaling of confinement time observed in NSTX H-modes. Most
interestingly, the existence of a turbulence-free regime in the
collision-induced CTEM to DTEM transition, corresponding to a
minimum plasma transport in advanced ST collisionality regime, is
predicted.
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Submitted to: Physics of Plasmas
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