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4th US-PRC Magnetic Controlled Fusion Collaboration Workshop, UT Austin, May 5-6, 2008 Recent ICRF Results in the Alcator CMod Tokamak Presented by Yijun Lin With contributions from S. Wukitch, A. Binus, A. Incecushman, E. Marmar, M. Reinke, and J. Rice Alcator C-Mod Project MIT, Plasma Science and Fusion Center Cambridge, MA 02139, USA 1 Outline Introduction of Alcator C-Mod Overview of ICRF program Recent ICRF results: • ICRF technology: fast ferrite tuning system • Fast wave direct electron heating • Mode conversion sawtooth modification • Mode conversion flow drive Collaboration areas 2 C-Mod Unique in World and US Among High Performance Divertor Tokamaks Unique in the World: • High field, high performance divertor tokamak • Particle and momentum source-free heating and current drive • Equilibrated electron-ion coupling • Bulk all high-Z plasma facing components • ITER level (and beyond) Scrape-OffLayer/Divertor Power Density • Approach ITER neutral opacity, radiation trapping • Highest pressure and energy density plasmas Exclusive in the US : • ICRF minority heating • Lower hybrid current drive • A premier major US facility for graduate student training 4 Present ICRF System D & E antennas J antenna Frequency 80 MHz 40-80 MHz Power 2 x 2 MW 4 MW Antenna 2x2 Strap 4 Strap Phase fixed variable 5 ITER Relevance C-Mod ICRF ITER ICRF • Fundamental and second harmonic with access to direct fast wave. • Fundamental 3He and second harmonic tritium. • Both high and low single • High single pass absorption. pass absorption scenarios. • Antenna power density is ~10 MW/m2. • Antenna power density ~6-8 MW/m2. • Utilize ICRF with high Z first wall materials. • Likely to have high Z first wall materials. 6 C-Mod ICRF Research Themes RF system R & D: • Antenna design, and real-time match for successful RF operation. RF edge-plasma interactions: • Antenna coupling, dynamic loading, voltage and power limitations, RF sheath, and impurity production. Wave propagation and absorption: • Fundamental minority heating, 2nd harmonic majority heating, direct fast wave, and mode conversion absorption regimes. • To validate simulation codes, scalable to ITER and reactors, to provide confidence in simulation codes used for discharge analysis. Plasma current and flow drive: • To develop means to control plasma current profile and affect stability of MHD modes (e.g., sawtooth modification). • Investigate flow drive and application. 7 RF Tech. R&D: Fast Ferrite Tuning System • A transmitter needs to be isolated from the antenna through impedance matching network. • Antenna loading changes with plasma conditions in real-time. • Ferrite material varies vs. ambient B field length variation in the line. • Digital control on the tuner current to achieve real-time matching. • Triple-stub design: one prematch stub, and two with ferrite tuners. 8 Fast Ferrite Tuning System • Equivalent length change up to 36 cm at 80 MHz with change of 300 A coil currents. • Power supply swing capability: 75 A/ms • Computation iteration: 250 s • Filled with SF6 for higher voltage handling • Water cooled • Optical arc detection 9 Digital Controller and Power Supply Linux server PLC interfaces RF power/phase detector Power Supply Digital Controller 10 FFT Performance in L- and H-modes • Under real-time digital control, the FFT system can maintain the power reflection below 2% under significant antenna load variation. • First installed as a double-stub system in 2007, re-configured to triple-stub in 2008, and has been running successfully in the entire 2008 campaign. • Max net-power handled 1.85 MW in H-mode. 11 Latest ICRF Physics Experiments From 04/22 to 05/02/2008 (last two weeks), we ran experiments with J-antenna at 50 MHz, and D/E antennas at 80 MHz. In this setup we can access many scenarios other than the normal D(H) minority ICRF heating: • Bt ~ 5.3 T, D(H) plasma J antenna fast wave direct electron heating (no IC resonance), H-minority heating with D/E antennas. • Bt ~ 5.1 T, D(H) plasma with low 3He concentration Hminority heating with D/E antennas and 3He-minority heating from J antenna. • Bt ~ 5.1 T, D(H) plasma with moderate 3He concentration H-minority heating with D/E antennas and D(3He) mode conversion heating/current drive/flow drive from J antenna. • Bt ~ 3.3 T, H-minority heating with J antenna and also 2nd harmonic deuteron heating. Really recent data: No detailed analysis, but only preliminary intepretation. 12 Fast Wave Electron Heating Wplasma [kJ] FWEH Te [keV] J (50 MHz) Power [MW] J antenna at 50 MHz does not have an ion cyclotron resonance in normal Bt = 5.3 T D(H) plasmas. Fast wave electron heating was observed in good confinement plasmas (relatively high β) preheated with minority heating. D+E (80 MHz) Power [MW] Data from 04/23 13 Sawteeth Period vs. MCCD 50 MHz, D(3He), Mode conversion near q = 1 surface Co-Current CD, Average sawtooth 10 ms Counter-Current CD, sawtooth 8 ms Heating phase, sawtooth 10 ms Data from 04/22 and 04/25 D+E 1.7 MW D/E 1.7 MW and J 1.7 MW 14 Strong Rotation with Small Increase in Wp Toroidal rotation (km/s) Strong co-Current rotation > 100 km/sec was observed with only 50 kJ increase in plasma energy in some mode conversion plasmas. Stored energy (kJ) A factor of 2 more than normal intrinsic plasma rotation scaling ΔV [km/sec] ~ 0.9* ΔW[kJ]/Ip[MA] J 50 MHz (MW) J antenna in mode conversion regime, while D and E in minority heating regime. D+E 80 MHz (MW) First observed on 04/22/2008. Surprising result. 15 Mode Conversion Flow Drive Toroidal rotation (km/s) J-ant D+E Stored energy (kJ) At the power level, J antenna in mode conversion regime generated about twice core rotation than D and E antenna in minority heating. J 50 MHz (MW) D+E 80 MHz (MW) Data from 04/25 16 Rotation Velocity vs. RF power Blue circles: Mode conversion flow scales with the RF power. Black squares: Minority heating. Data from 04/25 and 04/29 17 Collaboration Areas • • • • ICRF physics and technology LHRF physics and technology Diagnostics MDS-plus 18