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3. As noted above, improvement confinement associated with the injection of pellets has been observed in TJ-II during NBI phase of its plasmas. Using a simple model, the modification of turbulent transport by a pellet injection and how this modification affects particle confinement time has been studied [5]. The results indicate a relationship between improved confinement and the evolution of shear flows due to turbulence, especially near low order rational surfaces. Furthermore, experiments show that an additional pellet, or pellets, may enhance the confinement improvement produced by the first. This effect is reproduced in the model when the second density pellet is launched soon after the first one. For this to occur, the second pellet must be injected in the transient period, before the plasma returns to the steady state. In a separate new study on enhanced confinement for a specific magnetic configuration, 100-48-65 (comparison with with and without pellets), it is found that enhanced confinement can depend strongly on plasma currents, which in turn, indicates a dependence on rotational transform (location of low-order rational surfaces in gradient region) [6]. | 3. As noted above, improvement confinement associated with the injection of pellets has been observed in TJ-II during NBI phase of its plasmas. Using a simple model, the modification of turbulent transport by a pellet injection and how this modification affects particle confinement time has been studied [5]. The results indicate a relationship between improved confinement and the evolution of shear flows due to turbulence, especially near low order rational surfaces. Furthermore, experiments show that an additional pellet, or pellets, may enhance the confinement improvement produced by the first. This effect is reproduced in the model when the second density pellet is launched soon after the first one. For this to occur, the second pellet must be injected in the transient period, before the plasma returns to the steady state. In a separate new study on enhanced confinement for a specific magnetic configuration, 100-48-65 (comparison with with and without pellets), it is found that enhanced confinement can depend strongly on plasma currents, which in turn, indicates a dependence on rotational transform (location of low-order rational surfaces in gradient region) [6]. | ||
4. Pellet injection experiments | 4. Pellet injection experiments have been performed for a range of magnetic configurations of TJ-II in order to increase our understanding of pellet deposition profiles and of the role of rational surfaces in plasmoid drift in stellarators [7, 8, 9]. In a first instance, it is found that fast-electron impacts on a pellet can lead to ice destruction, this leading to enhanced fuelling efficiency. It is considered that a sudden pellet destruction inhibits the development of normal outward drifting of plasmoids that occurs when pellets are ablated by thermal electrons only [7]. In a separate study, plasmoid drifting is found to be significantly reduced, as is observed in tokamaks, in the vicinity of rational surfaces (rational surfaces have magnetic field lines that are periodic; i.e., the magnetic field lines close back on themselves) [8]. This is attributed to the fact that plasmoid external charge reconnection lengths shorten when close to rational surfaces, resulting in more effective damping of plasmoid drift. Although in stellarators, the effect of plasmoid external currents on drift is expected to be negligible, compared with plasmoid internal currents, this latter effect is clearly measurable in TJ-II. In addition, code simulations reveal that enhanced drift reductions near rational surfaces lead to significantly different deposition profiles for standard magnetic configurations in TJ-II. This implies that it should be possible to identify magnetic configurations that will result in more efficient pellet fuelling. In a further study in the area, a comparison was made on the influence of plasmoid-drift mechanisms on plasma fuelling by cryogenic pellets in ITER and Wendelstein 7-X [9]. | ||
5. A tracer-encapsulated solid pellet (TESPEL) system was commissioned successfully for the stellarator Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) during its OP1.2b experimental campaign [ | 5. A tracer-encapsulated solid pellet (TESPEL) system was commissioned successfully for the stellarator Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) during its OP1.2b experimental campaign [10, 11, 12, 13]. TESPELs are polystyrene encapsulated solid pellets loaded with a single tracer or multiple tracers that are employed for impurity transport studies. During the OP1.2b campaign approximately 140 pellet injections were performed with successful delivery rate of 89%, this result showing that TESPEL production is very reliable. A significant fraction of those TESPELs were fabricated at Ciemat. A large number of TESPELs have been produced for the 2024 SOII experimental campaign on W7-X and for the 2024 campaign on the Large Helical Device (LHD) stellarator. The results for these experiments will be published in the near future. | ||
6. Experiments in the LHD with continuous lithium power dropping have allowed the creation of a reactor-relevant high-density plasma regime [ | 6. Experiments in the LHD with continuous lithium power dropping have allowed the creation of a reactor-relevant high-density plasma regime [14, 15]. This is characterized by increased energy confinement as well as surpressed turbulence and reduced impurity confinement. The transition to this regime is driven by the continuous dropping of Li-powder grains into the plasma. When such plasmas are compared to plasmas without Li-powder the achieved high-performance characteristics include: increased plasma energy & core electron temperature, reduced plasma-wall interaction, and an up to one order of magnitude reduction in plasma turbulence across the whole plasma radius in the frequency range 5 to 500 kHz. In addition, and contrary to expectations for high-density plasmas in stellarators, it is seen, when injecting TESPELs to deposit tracers in the core of this high-performance phase, that impurity confinement is significantly reduced for plasmas with Li powder when compared to confinement in discharges without Li-powder. These new results demonstrate the potential of continuous dropping of Li-powder into stellarator plasmas for simultaneously accessing enhanced confinement regimes while avoiding impurity accumulation. | ||
== References == | == References == |
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