Reversed-field pinch studies in the Madison Symmetric Torus

Autor: Hokin, S., Almagri, A., Cekic, M., Chapman, B., Crocker, N., Den Hartog, D. J., Fiksel, G., Henry, J., Ji, H., Prager, S., Sarff, J., Scime, E., Shen, W., Stoneking, M., Watts, C.
Zdroj: Journal of Fusion Energy; September 1993, Vol. 12 Issue: 3 p281-287, 7p
Abstrakt: Studies of large-size (R=1.5 m,a=0.5 m), moderate current (I <750 kA) reversed-field pinch (RFP) plasmas are carried out in the Madison Symmetric Torus in order to evaluate and improve RFP confinement, study general toroidal plasma MHD issues, determine the mechanism of the RFP dynamo, and measure fluctuation-induced transport and anomalous ion heating. MST confinement scaling falls short of the RFP scaling trends observed in smaller RFPs, although the plasma resistance is classical. MHD tearing modes with poloidal mode numberm=1 and toroidal mode numbersn=5–7 are prevalent and nonlinearly couple to produce sudden relaxations akin to tokamak sawteeth. Edge fluctuation-induced transport has been measured with a variety of insertable probes. Ions exhibit anomalous heating, with increases of ion temperature occurring during strong MHD relaxation. The anomalous heating fraction decreases with increasing density, such that ion temperatures approach the lower limit given by electron-ion friction. The RFP dynamo has been studied with attention to various possible mechanisms, including motion-EMF drive, the Hall effect, and superthermal electrons. The toroidal field capacity of MST will be upgraded during Summer 1993 to allow low-current tokamak operation as well as improved RFP operation.
Databáze: Supplemental Index