Abstract. We investigate time-series obtained from gyrofluid simulations in coupled edge/scrape-off layer turbulence characteristic for fusion edge-region plasmas. Blob birth near the separatrix produces intermittent signals whose statistics depend on the ion mass of the reactor fuel, pointing towards overall slower dynamics for heavier isotopes. We find that a recently established shot-noise stochastic model for scrape-off layer fluctuations coincides reasonably well with the numerical simulations performed in this contribution.
Abstract. The role of ion polarisation and finite Larmor radius on the isotope effect on turbulent tokamak edge transport and flows is investigated by means of local electromagnetic multi-species gyro-fluid computations. Transport is found to be reduced with the effective plasma mass for protium, deuterium and tritium mixtures. This isotope effect is found for both cold and warm ion models, but significant influence of finite Larmor radius and polarisation effects are identified. Sheared flow reduction of transport through self generated turbulent zonal flows and geodesic acoustic modes in the present model (not including neoclassical flows) is found to play only a minor role on regulating isotopically improved confinement.
Abstract. The influence of the ion mass on filament propagation in the scrape-off layer of toroidal magnetised plasmas is analysed for various fusion relevant majority species, like hydrogen isotopes and helium, on the basis of a computational isothermal gyrofluid model for the plasma edge. Heavy hydrogen isotope plasmas show slower outward filament propagation and thus improved confinement properties compared to light isotope plasmas, regardless of collisionality regimes. Similarly, filaments in fully ionised helium move more slowly than in deutrium. Different mass effects on the filament inertia through polarisation, finite Larmor radius, and parallel dynamics are identified.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.