at Austin in USA, was dismantled and shipped to China in 2004, and renamed as the Joint TEXT (J-TEXT) tokamak. The reconstruction work, which included reassembly of the machine and development of peripheral devices, was completed in spring of 2007. Consequently, the first plasma was obtained at the end of 2007. At present, a typical J-TEXT Ohmic discharge can produce a plasma with flattop current up to 220kA and lasting for 300ms, line averaged density above 2×10 19 m-3 , and an electron temperature about 800eV, with a toroidal magnetic field of 2.2T. A number of diagnostic devices used to facilitate the routine operation and experimental scenarios were developed on the J-TEXT tokamak. Hence, the measurements of the electrostatic fluctuations in the edge region and conditional analysis of the intermittent burst events near the last closed flux surface (LCFS) were undertaken. The observation and simple analysis of MHD activity and disruption events were also performed. The preliminary experimental results and the future research plan for the J-TEXT are described in detail.
In the J-TEXT tokamak, the penetration of resonant magnetic perturbations (RMPs) has been studied by using a set of in-vessel RMP coils. It is found that, once the RMP amplitude exceeds a critical value, the applied RMP can lead to field penetration and excitation of a large locked mode in the tearing-stable plasma. The sawtooth oscillations disappear and the confinement deteriorates significantly accompanied by tearing mode excitation. For the plasma with an initial high frequency tearing mode, the RMP can suppress the tearing mode, and field penetration followed with a further increased RMP. The relationship between the RMP penetration threshold and the electron density has been investigated for tearing-stable plasmas. It is found that the penetration threshold increases with the density and scales proportionally to in the ranges of (0.7–2.7) × 1019 m−3. Using the experimental parameters as input, the numerical modelling based on two-fluid equations gives the scaling of , which approximately agrees with the experimental density scaling.
Abstract:The first comprehensive measurements of plasma flows and fluctuations nearby static magnetic islands driven by resonant magnetic perturbations (RMPs) are presented.These experiments were performed using multiple Langmuir probe arrays in the edge plasmas of the J-TEXT tokamak. The effects of controlled variations of the island size and location are explored. This study aims to understand the interaction between turbulence and magnetic islands, and to elucidate magnetic island effects on edge turbulence and flow intensity profiles, edge electric fields, and thus confinement regime transitions. Turbulence and low frequency flows (LFFs) all drop inside the magnetic island, but increase at its boundary, as island width increases. The geodesic acoustic mode (GAM) is damped in most of the edge area with magnetic islands. The sign of the radial electric field changes from negative to positive within 2 the islands. The gradient of turbulent stresses vanishes at island center, and becomes steeper at the boundary of the islands. The particle transport induced by the turbulence is reduced inside the magnetic islands. The magnetic island effects on flows and turbulence can lead to an increase in LFFs and enhance Reynolds stresses near the last closed flux surface (LCFS). A stronger radial electric field layer can be formed near the LCFS when magnetic islands are present. The results suggest that magnetic islands can be used as a tool to enhance edge turbulence and flows, edge electric fields, and thus to trigger confinement regime transitions.
Recent J-TEXT research has highlighted the significance of the role that non-axisymmetric magnetic perturbations, so called three-dimensional (3D) magnetic perturbation (MP) fields, play in a fundamentally 2D concept, i.e. tokamaks. This paper presents the J-TEXT results achieved over the last two years, especially on the impacts of 3D MP fields on magnetohydrodynamic instabilities, plasma disruptions and plasma turbulence transport. On J-TEXT, the resonant MP (RMP) system, capable of providing either a static or a high frequency (up to 8 kHz) rotating RMP field, has been upgraded by adding a new set of 12 in-vessel saddle coils. The shattered pellet injection system was built in J-TEXT in the spring of 2018. The new capabilities advance J-TEXT to be at the forefront of international magnetic fusion facilities, allowing flexible study of 3D effects and disruption mitigation in a tokamak. The fast rotating RMP field has been successfully applied for avoidance of mode locking and the prevention of plasma disruption. A new control strategy, which applies pulsed RMP to the tearing mode only during the accelerating phase region, was proved by nonlinear numerical modelling to be efficient in accelerating mode rotation and even completely suppresses the mode. Remarkably, the rotating tearing mode was completely suppressed by the electrode biasing. The impacts of 3D magnetic topology on the turbulence has been investigated on J-TEXT. It is found that the fluctuations of electron density, electron temperature and plasma potential can be significantly modulated by the island structure, and a larger fluctuation level appears at the X-point of islands. The suppression of runaway electrons during disruptions is essential to the operation of ITER, and it has been reached by utilizing the 3D magnetic perturbations on J-TEXT. This may provide an alternative mechanism of runaway suppression for large-scale tokamaks and ITER.
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