This paper describes the recent progress in divertor simulation research using the GAMMA 10/PDX tandem mirror towards the development of divertors in fusion reactors. During a plasma flow generation experiment in the end cell of the GAMMA 10/PDX, ICRF heating in the anchor cell successfully extended the particle flux up to 3.3 × 1023 m2 s−1. Superimposing the short pulse of the ECH also attained a maximum heat flux of ~30 MW m−2. We have succeeded in achieving and characterizing the detachment of the high-temperature plasma, which is equivalent to the SOL plasma of tokamaks, by using the divertor simulation experimental module (D-module) in the GAMMA 10/PDX end cell, in spite of using a linear device with a short magnetic field line connection length. Various gases (Ar, Xe, Ne and N2) are examined to evaluate the effect of radiation cooling against the plasma flow at the MW m−2 level in the divertor simulation region and the following results are obtained: (i) Xe gas was most effective in the reduction of heat and particle fluxes (1%, 3%, respectively) and has a stronger effect on electron cooling (down to ~1.6 eV) in the used gas species. (ii) Ne gas was less effective. On the other hand, (iii) N2 gas showed more favorable effects than Ar in the lower pressure range. These results will contribute to the progress in detached plasma operation and in clarifying the radiation cooling mechanism towards the development of future divertors.
Microwave power, P ECH < 140 kW, has been injected at 28 GHz into the axisymmetric plug/barrier cell in the axisymmetrized tandem mirror GAMMA 10. As observed by soft X-ray measurements, the microwaves generate a hot (50-60 keV) electron population, radially peaked on the magnetic axis, which results in the formation of a thermal barrier. The production mechanism of these hot electrons is found to be second harmonic electron cyclotron heating (ECH), corrected for the effects of the relativistic mass variation and the Doppler shift. This mechanism also explains the first experimental observation of a saturation of the single-component hot electron temperature T eh as being caused by the finite width of the incident microwave lobe. The dependence of the plasma parameters on the filling gas pressure, the plasma density and the ECH power is studied. It is found that the heating process can be interpreted as a competition between electron acceleration by the incident wave, electron deceleration by collisions, and the mirror trapping efficiency of the source electrons for hot electrons. The axial profile of the soft X-rays is investigated in relation to the mechanism of the second harmonic ECH. The heating process is discussed in terms of the electron pitch angle and the magnetic field intensity.
Vortexlike turbulent structures in hot-ion mode plasmas with several keV are observed in the case with a radially produced weak shear of electric fields E(r). However, a strong E(r) shear formation due to a high ion-confining potential phi(c) production clears up these vortices together with plasma-confinement improvement and disappearance of both drift-wave and turbulencelike Fourier spectral signals. These findings are based on three-time progress in phi(c) in comparison to phi(c) attained 1992-2002. The significant advance of phi(c) is well extended in line with proposed potential-formation physics scalings.
Off-axis electron-cyclotron heating in an axisymmetric barrier mirror produces a cylindrical layer with energetic electrons, which flow through the central cell and into the end region. The layer, producing a localized bumped ambipolar potential Phi(C), forms a strong shear of radial electric fields E(r) and peaked vorticity with the direction reversal of E(r)xB sheared flow near the Phi(C) peak. Intermittent vortexlike turbulent structures near the layer are suppressed in the central cell by this actively produced transverse energy-transport barrier; this results in T(e) and T(i) rises surrounded by the layer.
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