Title: Heating and Current Drive Scenarios in a Tokamak
1Heating and Current Drive Scenarios in a Tokamak
- Yong-Su Na
- Seoul National University
Korean Fusion Plasma Summer School 2009
2Contents
- 1. What is Tokamak? Why Heating and Current
Drive? - 2. Heating and Current Drive in a Tokamak
- 3. Tokamak Operation Scenario
- 4. H-mode Scenario
- 5. Reversed Shear Scenario
- 6. Hybrid Scenario
3Contents
- 1. What is Tokamak? Why Heating and Current
Drive? - 2. Heating and Current Drive in a Tokamak
- 3. Tokamak Operation Scenario
- 4. H-mode Scenario
- 5. Reversed Shear Scenario
- 6. Hybrid Scenario
4To build a sun on earth
5Magnetic confinement
- Imitation of the Sun on Earth
magnetic field
vessel wall
plasma pressure
plasmapressure
Plasma on earthmuch, much smaller tiny mass!
Equilibrium in the sun
6Magnetic confinement
Magnetic field
ion
7Tokamak
Magnetic field
ion
8Tokamak
Donut-shaped vacuum vessel
9Tokamak
R0
a
Plasma needs to be confined R0 1.8 m, a 0.5 m
in KSTAR
10Tokamak
Toroidal Field (TF) coil
Applying toroidal magnetic field 3.5 T in KSTAR
11Tokamak
Toroidal Field (TF) coil
Magnetic field of earth?
0.5 Gauss 0.00005 T
12Tokamak
ion
electron
Applying toroidal magnetic field 3.5 T in KSTAR
13Tokamak
14Tokamak
ion
- - - electron
15Tokamak
ion
Electric field, E
- - - electron
16Tokamak
ion
ExB drift
Electric field, E
- - - electron
ExB drift
17Tokamak
ion
ExB drift
Electric field, E
- - - electron
ExB drift
Poloidal magnetic field required
Then, how to?
Tokamak .VS. Stellarator
Plasma current ? Tokamak
18Tokamak
Central Solenoid (CS)
Transformer
19Tokamak
Central Solenoid (CS)
Faradays law
Transformer
20Tokamak
Central Solenoid (CS)
Plasma
Faradays law
Transformer
21Tokamak
Central Solenoid (CS)
Plasma
Faradays law
Poloidal field
Pulsed Operation!
22Pulsed Operation Current Drive
Plasma Current
MA
t(s)
PF Coil Flux
Power Supply Limit
Wb
t(s)
Pulsed Operation!
23Tokamak
Adding vertical field coils (PF)
current
current
coil
coil
24Tokamak
X
PF coils
?
X
current
current
Force
X
X
?
coil
coil
X
Plasma shaping by PF coils
25Tokamak
- The plasma shape can be modified by PF coil
currents.
26Tokamak
27Tokamak
Adding vertical field coils (PF)
Plasma shaping by PF coils
28Tokamak
Invented by Tamm and Sakharov in 1952
Toroidalnaja kamera magnitnaja katushka (Toroidal
chamber magnetic coil)
29Tokamak
Invented by Tamm and Sakharov in 1952
Cutaway of the Toroidal Chamber in
Artsimovitch's Paper Research on Controlled
Nuclear Fusion in the USSR
Toroidalnaja kamera magnitnaja katushka (Toroidal
chamber magnetic coil)
30Tokamak
JET (Joint European Torus) R03m, a0.9m,
1983-today
31Tokamak
JET (Joint European Torus) R03m, a0.9m,
1983-today
32Tokamak
KSTAR (Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced
Research) R01.8m, a0.5m, 2008
33Fusion Reaction
34Fusion Reactor Requirements
What is required to light a fire in a stove?
- Fuel D, T
- Amount/density
- Heat insulation
- Ignition temperature
35Contents
- 1. What is Tokamak? Why Heating and Current
Drive? - 2. Heating and Current Drive in a Tokamak
- 3. Tokamak Operation Scenario
- 4. H-mode Scenario
- 5. Reversed Shear Scenario
- 6. Hybrid Scenario
36Heating and Current Drive
37Ohmic Heating
Electric blanket
38Ohmic Heating
F
Ip
Vp
ICS
http//en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?titleFileTra
nsformer.svgfiletimestamp20070330220406
39Neutral Beam Injection
Autobahn in Germany 259 Car Crash
40Neutral Beam Injection
NBI
Plasma
Neutral beam
Andy Warhol
http//www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/galex/20070815/f
.html
41Neutral Beam Injection
Injection of a beam of neutral fuel atoms (H, D,
T) at high energies (Eb gt 50 keV)
? Ionisation in the plasma
? Beam particles confined
? Collisional slowing down
Eb 120 keV and 1 MeV for KSTAR and ITER,
respectively
42Electromagnetic Waves
Tuning fork
Resonance
43Electromagnetic Waves
Tacoma Narrows Bridge (1940. 11. 4)
44Electromagnetic Waves
Microwave oven
http//cafe.naver.com/nadobaker.cafe?iframe_url/A
rticleRead.nhn3Farticleid82
http//blog.naver.com/rlhyuny27?RedirectLoglogNo
30029307561
45Electromagnetic Waves
Resonance zone
Excitation of plasma wave (frequency w) near
plasma edge
? wave transports power into the plasma center
Antenna
? absorption near resonance, e.g. ? ? ?c , i.e.
conversion of wave energy into kinetic energy of
resonant particles
? Resonant particles thermalise
R
46Electromagnetic Waves
Resonance zone
Antenna
KSTAR first plasma
R
47Contents
- 1. What is Tokamak? Why Heating and Current
Drive? - 2. Heating and Current Drive in a Tokamak
- 3. Tokamak Operation Scenario
- 4. H-mode Scenario
- 5. Reversed Shear Scenario
- 6. Hybrid Scenario
48Tokamak Operation Scenario
JET pulse 69905 (BT3.1T)
Plasma initiation
Plasma quench
49Contents
- 1. What is Tokamak? Why Heating and Current
Drive? - 2. Heating and Current Drive in a Tokamak
- 3. Tokamak Operation Scenario
- 4. H-mode Scenario
- 5. Reversed Shear Scenario
- 6. Hybrid Scenario
50H-mode
- 1982 IAEA F. Wagner et al. (ASDEX)
51H-mode
- 1982 IAEA F. Wagner et al. (ASDEX)
52Energy Confinement Time
Temperature
Time
53Energy Confinement Time
Temperature
Time
tE
- tE is a measure of how fast the plasma looses
its energy. - The loss rate is smallest, tE largest if the
fusion plasma is big and well insulated.
54H-mode
- 1982 IAEA F. Wagner et al. (ASDEX)
Hoover dam
55H-mode
- 1982 IAEA F. Wagner et al. (ASDEX)
Hoover dam
56H-mode How to? (I)
- Separation of plasma from wall by a limiter and
a divertor
Strike point
57Tokamak
58Tokamak
59H-mode How to? (II)
Pth 2.84M-1Bt0.82n200.58R1.0a0.81
60H-mode Why?
- 1982 IAEA F. Wagner et al. (ASDEX)
61Turbulence Stabilisation
62H-mode Why?
Theoretical physics
63H-mode Why?
Theoretical physics
Experimental physics
64Safety Factor, q
- Safety factor q number of toroidal orbits per
poloidal orbit
65Tokamak Operation Scenario
q-profiles
5
4
3
2
1
ELMy H-mode
0
0
0.5
1
r/a
66H-mode Limitations
Stability of H-mode plasmas related safety factor
profile q(r)
q0 lt 1 Sawtooth instability, periodic
flattening of the pressure in the core
H-mode, q-profile
5
4
3
2
q 1
1
0
0.5
1
0
r/a
67Sawtooth
ASDEX Upgrade pulse 20438
1
Ip (MA)
PNBI (MW)
10
PRF (MW)
WMHD (MJ)
1
6
Nel x1.1019
8
Ti (keV)
Te (keV)
0
2
4
6
8
time (s)
68H-mode Limitations
Stability of H-mode plasmas related safety factor
profile q(r)
q0 lt 1 Sawtooth instability, periodic
flattening of the pressure in the core
H-mode, q-profile
5
4
- q 3/2 and q 2
- Neoclassical Tearing Modes (NTMs)
- limit the achievable ß 2µ0p/B2
- degrade confinement ( disruptions)
- often triggered by sawteeth.
3
q 2
2
q 3/2
q 1
1
0
0.5
1
0
- ITER work point is chosenconservatively bN ?1.8
!
r/a
69Neoclassical Tearing Mode (NTM)
ASDEX Upgrade
70Neoclassical Tearing Mode (NTM)
- Pressure flattening across magnetic islands due
to large transport coefficients along
magnetic field lines
71Neoclassical Tearing Mode (NTM)
72Neoclassical Tearing Mode (NTM)
NTM stabilisation with ITER relevant broad
deposition in ASDEX Upgrade
Feedback controlled Deposition in DIII-D
- Demonstration of individual elements as well as
integrated feedback
73NTM Stabilisation by ECCD
74Contents
- 1. What is Tokamak? Why Heating and Current
Drive? - 2. Heating and Current Drive in a Tokamak
- 3. Tokamak Operation Scenario
- 4. H-mode Scenario
- 5. Reversed Shear Scenario
- 6. Hybrid Scenario
75Inductive Current Drive
Pulsed Operation!
76Reversed Shear Scenario
Plasma Current
MA
SoF
Ip2MA
ECH Heating
SoB
?N2.0
(?N1.8)
NBI(8MW) ICRH(6MW) Heating
t(s)
40
44
64
68
PF Coil Flux
Flux-linkage V-s
Wb
(5.5)
(6.0)
30
40
t(s)
70
(-5.7)
(-6.1)
77Tokamak Operation Scenario
q-profiles
5
strong
4
Reversed shear
3
weak
2
1
ELMy H-mode
- Good confinement
- Poor stability
0
0
0.5
1
r/a
78Tokamak Operation Scenario
q-profiles
5
strong
4
Reversed shear
3
weak
2
1
ELMy H-mode
- Good confinement
- Poor stability
- Only weak RS plasmas are stable
- but they require a delicate active
control
0
0
0.5
1
r/a
79Reversed Shear Scenario
High bootstrap current!
- Higher pressure gradient region in the core with
steep edge pedestal
- With negative magnetic shear
80Bootstrap Current
B
R
81Bootstrap Current
- But more faster particles on orbits nearer the
core (green cf blue) lead to a net banana
current - this is transferred to a helical bootstrap
current via collisions
82Reversed Shear Scenario
H-mode Reversed shear
mode
83Reversed Shear Scenario
Internal Transport Barrier (ITB)
H-mode ETB
84Reversed Shear Scenario
Internal Transport Barrier (ITB)
H-mode ETB
85Turbulence Stabilisation
Z
Z
ITB
Temperature profile
R
R
Contour lines of electric potential.
Contour lines of electric potential.
86Reversed Shear Scenario
Non-monotonic current profile Turbulence
suppression High pressure gradients
Large bootstrap current Non-inductive current
drive
87Reversed Shear Scenario
q95 5
Technique used since mid 1990s
Ip
III Performance at stable q(r)
II Create ITB
time
I Reverse q(r)
I Heat during current rise, external current
drive (reverse q). II Increase heating power to
stabilise turbulence (ITB).Improve plasma
confinement, try to increase pressure (bN) III
Keep going ITER non-inductive regime(ITER
9MA, 50 external current drive (73MW), 50
bootstrap fraction)
88Reversed Shear Scenario
I Form q(r), II create ITB, III But discharge
terminates (unstable)
Fukuda T and the JT-60U team 2002 Plasma Phys.
Control. Fusion 44 B39B52
89Reversed Shear Scenario
- Formation of an ITB at low ne,with 15 MW NBI
powerTi gt Te, high rotation shear - ITBs are relatively short lived,only few tE
- Good, transient performanceH893, bN 3
- ITB not compatible with H-mode edge barrier and
large ELMs
90Reversed Shear Scenario
(R01.7m. ,a0.6m. )
- Less RS
- HH98(y,2) 1.37
- ßN 2.62
- q95 5
- Weak ITBs
Wade, Nucl. Fusion 43 (2003) 634646
91Sustainment of Non-monotonic Current Profile
- Plasma current diffusion into the core from the
edge
Current and pressure profile control !
92Reversed Shear Scenario
- Current density profile control at ASDEX Upgrade
93RT Current and Pressure Profile Control
- Simultaneous control of distributed magnetic and
kinetic paramters - Dedicated experiments to identify controller
coefficients
- Modulation combinations of actuators (NBI, LH,
ICRH) to infer the coefficients of the state
space model of the slow loop. - Two control loops, 4 actuators (NBI, LH, ICRH,
PF)
94RT Current and Pressure Profile Control
- JT60-U Real time qmin control with MSE
diagnostics and LHCD
jOH or jBS change
- Transport reduction at t12.4 s
- Time delay in response of qmin
MSE LH
95Contents
- 1. What is Tokamak? Why Heating and Current
Drive? - 2. Heating and Current Drive in a Tokamak
- 3. Tokamak Operation Scenario
- 4. H-mode Scenario
- 5. Reversed Shear Scenario
- 6. Hybrid Scenario
96Tokamak Operation Scenario
q-profiles
5
strong
4
Reversed shear
3
weak
2
Hybrid
- Good confinement together with high
stability - w/o active control
1
ELMy H-mode
- Good confinement
- Poor stability
- Only weak RS plasmas are stable
- but they require a delicate active
control
0
0
0.5
1
r/a
97Tokamak Operation Scenario
98Hybrid Scenario
Ip
q953.3-4.5
II Timing, heating, MHD
III Perf. at stable q(r)
time
I Form q(r)
I Obtain low magnetic shear in the centre q0 gt
1 II Timing and amount of the heating are
important. MHD behaviour (no sawteeth, but
fishbones and/or small NTMs). H-mode, but no
confinement transients (ITBs). III Mild MHD
events to obtain stable q(r).Ultimate goal
H89bN gt 6 stationary, 50 non-inductive drive.
99Hybrid Scenario
17870
Ip (MA)
Da
PNBI (MW)
4xli
bN
H98(y,2)
1.0
H98(y,2)
ltnegt/nGW
ltnegt/nGW
- H98(y,2) 1.4
- ßN 2.8
- fBS 34
- fNB 31
0.0
1.0
Even n
0.0
Odd n
-1.0
0
2
4
6
8
Time (s)
100Hybrid Scenario
101Reversed Shear Scenario
HH98(y,2)bN/q952
HH98(y,2)bN/q952
0.4
0.4
q953
0.3
0.3
q95 5
Performance
Performance
ITER reference (Q10)
0.2
0.2
ITER advanced (Q5)
0.1
0.1
q95? 7
0
0
65
0
10
20
30
40
Bootstrap fraction
duration/tE
Distinct groups of results, best ones just fine
for Q5. Transient for q95 ? 4, ITER target for
q95 5 only.
102Hybrid Scenario
HH98(y,2)bN/q952
HH98(y,2)bN/q952
AUG DIII-D JT-60U JET Tore Supra
AUG DIII-D JT-60U JET Tore Supra
0.4
0.4
q953
0.3
0.3
ITER reference (Q10)
q95 5
Performance
Performance
0.2
0.2
(Q5)
0.1
0.1
q95? 7
0
0
0
20
40
60
80
40
Bootstrap fraction
duration/tE
Similar results from all machines, Qgt10 possible
(ignition?). 2x ITER target at q953, or long
pulse (2000s) at q954-4.5.
103Identity Experiments
Plasma shapes used in JET compared to ASDEX
Upgrade
JET
d ? 0.44
d ? 0.20
AUG
104Identity Experiments
AUG 17870 (2.1T)
JET 58323 (1.7T)
Ip (MA)
q95
Pnbi (MW)
H98 (y,2)
Ti0 (keV)
bN
Small MHD modes
105Summary
- 1. What is Tokamak? Why Heating and Current
Drive? - 2. Heating and Current Drive in a Tokamak
- 3. Tokamak Operation Scenario
- 4. H-mode Scenario
- 5. Reversed Shear Scenario
- 6. Hybrid Scenario