LNF:Estudio experimental de flujos, turbulencia y modos MHD, y su impacto en confinamiento en los stellarators TJ-II y W7-X
LNF - Nationally funded project
Title: Enter Title here
Reference: Referencia Plan Nacional
Programme and date: Proyectos de ... Año
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Principal Investigator(s): John Doe
Project type: Proyecto individual / coordinado
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Financing granted (direct costs): 0 €
Description of the project
The main objective of the present proposal is to study a family of instabilities present in the strongly magnetized plasmas required for the development of a practical nuclear fusion reactor, which range from the electrostatic drift turbulence typically dominating transport among thermal populations of confined species, to magneto-hydrodynamic modes destabilized by fast ion populations, such as the Alfvèn Eigenmodes, as well as the potential interactions between them. Finding mechanisms by which these instabilities can be suppressed or controlled in reactor-relevant conditions is critical for the achievement of the high plasma confinement required for an economical exploitation of nuclear fusion. With this aim, we propose the experimental characterization of these instabilities and the plasma conditions driving them, followed by its interpretation under the best available theoretical frameworks. This project can be seen as a continuation and expansion of the previous FIS2017-88892-P grant, in which related research was carried out in the TJ-II and Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) stellarators, including the commissioning and operation of several relevant diagnostics. From there, our work plan assesses the current state of the research and defines several lines of work such as turbulence stabilization during post-pellet phases, fluctuation and potential asymmetries, flow departure from neoclassical theory, NBI destabilization of AE modes, detection and characterization of zonal flows, etc.
TJ-II is the flagship of the National Laboratory for Fusion (LNF) and part of the Spanish ICTS catalogue. As members of the LNF, the proponents have full access to TJ-II, where the several diagnostics relevant for the study are available. In particular, a steerable Doppler reflectometry (DR) system provides the simultaneous measurement of fluctuations and flows, allowing for very detailed studies of turbulence, critical for the characterization of drift modes. As well, a helical array of Mirnov coils has been recently added to TJ-II, allowing for a detailed study of AEs, including their complex 3D structure in non-axisymmetric devices. W7-X is sited in the Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik (IPP) in Greifswald. W7X is the largest stellarator in the world and was built to reproduce a number of reactor-relevant features such as optimized magnetic field, high beta operation or actively cooled island divertor. Since 2015, the LNF has collaborated with IPP in the development of a DR system, which has already been successfully operated in previous experimental campaigns. Presently, this system is being refurbished including a number of improvements which will greatly expand the scope of the experimental measurements which can be carried out. As well, a new diagnostic has been included in the proposal: A Charge eXchange Recombination Spectroscopy (CXRS) system, which will complement the investigation of plasma flows carried out by the DR. These diagnostics will ensure access to experimental data in reactor-relevant conditions during the forthcoming OP2.1-OP2.3 campaigns, scheduled for the 2022-2024 period. On top of these purely experimental activities, we outline the data analysis and comparison of physical results to numerical simulations of turbulence (gyrokinetic codes), AE stability (gyrofluid codes), plasma profiles (neoclassical codes) or synthetic DR response to plasma conditions (2D full wave code).
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