Abstract

Asymmetric halo currents (HCs) can exert large net forces on the vacuum vessel and other components during disruptions on tokamaks. The displacements caused by these forces can then be amplified if these asymmetric forces rotate at frequencies resonant with the vessel. This paper reports on the investigation of a recently proposed scaling law for the disruption HC rotation frequency [Saperstein et al., “Halo current rotation scaling in post-disruption plasmas,” Nucl. Fusion 62, 026044 (2022)] that combines measurements on Alcator C-Mod with those on HBT-EP. We find that a new non-circular version of the scaling law [ ⟨ f rot ⟩ m / ⟨ m ⟩ ∝ 1 B T ( S / π )] takes into consideration the dependence of frot on the poloidal structure of the MHD instability (m) driving the asymmetry and describes the disruption-averaged rotation frequency on C-Mod. Disruption rotation is also found to be insensitive to the vertical position and impurity content of the plasma at the onset of the disruption. However, a stagnation in the time evolution of frot is occasionally observed. Observations are consistent with the dominance of poloidal rotation during the disruption, which is motivated by the poloidal drift nature of the scaling law.

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