Abstract

One of the most promising devices for realizing power production through nuclear fusion is the tokamak. To maximize performance, it is preferable that tokamak reactors achieve advanced operating scenarios characterized by good plasma confinement, improved magnetohydrodynamic stability, and a largely noninductively driven plasma current. Such scenarios could enable steady-state reactor operation with high fusion gain, the ratio of produced fusion power to the external power provided through the plasma boundary. For certain advanced scenarios, control of the spatial profile of the plasma current will be essential. The complexity of the current profile dynamics, arising due to nonlinearities and couplings with many other plasma parameters, motivates the use of model-based control algorithms that can account for the system dynamics. A first-principles-driven, control-oriented model of the current profile evolution in low-confinement mode (L-mode) discharges in the DIII-D tokamak is employed to address the problem of regulating the current profile evolution around desired trajectories. In the primarily inductive L-mode discharges considered in this paper, the boundary condition, which is dependent on the total plasma current, has the largest influence on the current profile dynamics, motivating the design of a boundary feedback control law to improve the system performance. The backstepping control design technique provides a systematic method to obtain a boundary feedback law through the transformation of a spatially discretized version of the original system into an asymptotically stable target system with desirable properties. Through a nonlinear transformation of the available physical actuators, the resulting control scheme produces references for the total plasma current, total power, and line averaged density, which are tracked by existing dedicated control loops. Adaptiveness is added to the control scheme to improve upon the backstepping controller's disturbance rejection and tracking capability. Prior to experimental testing, a Simserver simulation was carried out to study the controller's performance and ensure proper implementation in the DIII-D Plasma Control System. An experimental test was performed on DIII-D to test the ability of the controller to reject input disturbances and perturbations in initial conditions and to demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed control approach.

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