Abstract

This paper presents a comparative study of the poloidal distribution of the mean E × B shearing rate for positive triangularity (PT) and negative triangularity (NT) tokamaks. The effects of flux surface up–down asymmetry due to asymmetric upper and lower triangularities are also considered. Both direct eddy straining and the effects on Shafranov shift feedback loops are examined. Shafranov shift increases the shearing rate at all poloidal angles for all triangularities, due to flux surface compression. The maximum shearing rate bifurcates at a critical triangularity . Thus, the shearing rate is maximal off the outboard midplane for NT, while it is maximal on the outboard midplane for PT. For up–down asymmetric triangularity, the usual up–down symmetry of the shearing rate is broken. The shearing rate at the outboard midplane is lower for NT than for PT, suggesting that the shearing efficiency in NT is reduced. Implications for turbulence stabilisation and confinement improvement in high- NT and internal transport barrier discharges are discussed.

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