4.5 Article

Plasma heating by electron cyclotron wave and the temperature effects on lower hybrid current drive on EAST

Journal

NUCLEAR FUSION
Volume 63, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1741-4326/acbec9

Keywords

electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH); lower hybrid current drive (LHCD); current drive efficiency; collisional absorption

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This paper presents the progress in the long-pulse operation of the electron cyclotron (EC) system and the achievements in high-electron temperature plasmas by the combined EC and lower hybrid (LH) waves heating since the EC system was built in 2015. The heating effect strongly depends on the location of EC power deposition. H-mode plasmas with solely EC wave auxiliary heating have been obtained for the first time. The higher electron temperature produced by EC wave is found to reduce the LH power loss in the scrape-off layer.
This paper presents the progress in the long-pulse operation of the electron cyclotron (EC) system and the achievements in high-electron temperature plasmas by the combined EC and lower hybrid (LH) waves heating since the EC system was built in 2015. An electron temperature of up to 12 keV with a duration over 100 s was realized by the simultaneous heating of EC and LH waves at the line-averaged density n(e) similar to 1.8 x 10(19) m(-3). The plasma heating effect strongly depends on the location of EC power deposition. H-mode plasmas with solely EC wave auxiliary heating have been obtained on EAST for the first time. These H-mode discharges show an enhanced confinement factor H98(y,2) around 1.0, which is higher than the previous H-mode using LH power alone (Xu et al 2011 Nucl. Fusion 51 072001). The total heating power is very close to the threshold value for L-H transition according to the international tokamak scaling. In addition to the temperature effects inside the separatrix, higher electron temperature produced by EC wave is found to reduce the LH power loss in the scrape-off layer due to collisional absorption, which is beneficial to further increase the LH current drive efficiency. Ray-tracing/Fokker-Planck modeling results indicate that higher electron temperature can shorten the LH wave propagation on EAST in a multiple-pass regime, thus decreasing the collisional dissipation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available