Abstract

Recent DIII-D experiments have significantly improved the understanding of internal transport barriers (ITBs) that are triggered close to the time when an integer value of the minimum in q is crossed. While this phenomenon has been observed on many tokamaks, the extensive transport and fluctuation diagnostics on DIII-D have permitted a detailed study of the generation mechanisms of q-triggered ITBs as pertaining to turbulence suppression dynamics, shear flows, and energetic particle modes. In these discharges, the evolution of the q profile is measured using motional Stark effect polarimetry and the integer qmin crossings are further pinpointed in time by the observation of Alfvén cascades. High time resolution measurements of the ion and electron temperatures and the toroidal rotation show that the start of improved confinement is simultaneous in all three channels, and that this event precedes the traversal of integer qmin by 5–20ms. There is no significant low-frequency magnetohydrodynamic activity prior to or just after the crossing of the integer qmin and hence magnetic reconnection is determined not to be the precipitant of the confinement change. Instead, results from the GYRO code point to the effects of zonal flows near low order rational q values as playing a role in ITB triggering. A reduction in local turbulent fluctuations is observed at the start of the temperature rise and, concurrently, an increase in turbulence poloidal flow velocity and flow shear is measured with the beam emission spectroscopy diagnostic. For the case of a transition to an enduring internal barrier the fluctuation level remains at a reduced amplitude. The timing and nature of the temperature, rotation, and fluctuation changes leading to internal barriers suggests transport improvement due to increased shear flow arising from the zonal flow structures.

Highlights

  • Central to the goal of obtaining high performance fusion discharges in tokamaks is understanding how transitions to improved confinement occur

  • In general in DIII-D, electron ITBs are only seen in strongly reversed shear discharges, not moderate shear discharges like the ones discussed here

  • It should be noted here that the q profile plays no part in the determination of the maximum growth rate

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Summary

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Core barrier formation near integer q surfaces in DIII-Da. M. A. Van Zeeland9 1University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712 2General Atomics, P.O. Box 85608, San Diego, California 92186-5608 3University of California at Irvine, Irvine, California 92612 4Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 18015 5Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94550 6University of Wisconsin at Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 7Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 8University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90032 9Oak Ridge Institute for Science Education, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831-0117

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