Edge impurity transport is studied in electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH) L-mode plasmas of the HL-2A tokamak based on space-resolved vacuum ultraviolet spectroscopy with which radial profiles of impurity line emissions are measured from the core region inside the last closed flux surface (LCFS) and the edge region in the scrape-off layer, simultaneously. The radial profile of carbon emissions of C V (2271 Å: 1s2s 3 S-1s2p 3 P) reconstructed into the local emissivity profile is analysed with a one-dimensional impurity transport code, and the diffusion coefficient and convective velocity of impurity ions are determined in the core region of the HL-2A tokamak. The impurity source is also determined with the measured absolute emissivity profiles of C IV (1548 Å: 1s 2 2s 2 S-1s 2 2p 2 P) located at the LCFS. The ratio of C V to C IV can therefore be used as an index to characterize the core impurity transport between the LCFS and the radial region of the C V emission at a normalized radius of about ρ = 0.6. The ratio measured from ohmic discharges shows a gradual decrease with electron density. However, the ratio suddenly decreases by a factor of three when the ECRH focused in the plasma centre is switched on, suggesting a strong enhancement of the impurity transport. The analysis with the transport code indicates a change in the convective term. The convective velocity of C 4+ ions changes from inward to outward direction during the ECRH phase, while an inward velocity usually exists in the ohmic phase. Possible mechanisms for the reversal of the convective velocity are discussed.
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