Title: E.Lazzaro
1Free and Controlled Dynamics of Magnetic Islands
in Tokamaks
E. Lazzaro
IFP P.Caldirola, Euratom-ENEA-CNR Association,
Milano, Italy
2Outline
- Brief reminder of tokamak ideal equilibrium
- Nonideal effectsformation of magnetic island in
tokamaks through magnetic reconnection - Classical and neoclassical tearing modes
- Useful mathematical models of mode dynamics
- Problems and strategies of control by EC Current
Drive - Recent results from of experiments
- (FTU,ASDEX,DIII-D tokamaks)
3Motivation and Objectives
- The reliability of Plasma Confinement in
tokamaks is limited by the occurrence of - MHD instabilities that appear as growing
and rotating MAGNETIC ISLANDS LOCALIZED on
special isobaric surfaces and contribute to
serious energy losses and can lead to DISRUPTION
of the tokamak discharged. - They are observed both as MIRNOV magnetic
oscillations and as perturbations of Electron
Cyclotron Emission and Soft X-ray signals - They are associated with LOCALIZED perturbation
of the current J ,e.g. J bootstrap - Is it possible to stabilize or quench these
instabilities by LOCALIZED injection of wave
power (E.C.), heating locally or driving a
non-inductive LOCAL current to balance the Jboot
loss?
4Tokamak magnetic confinement configuration
- The most promising plasma (ideal) confinement is
obtained by magnetic field configurations that
permit a magnetoidrostatic balance of fluid
pressure gradient and magnetic force - Since the isobaric surfaces
(pnT) are covered ergodically by the lines of
force of B and since the nested
surfaces are of toroidal genus - The B field can be expressed through the the
magnetic flux (??R???) through a poloidal section
and (F(R,Z))through a toroidal section
5Non ideal effects Helical Perturbations
6Overview of basic concepts
- Tokamaks have good confinement because the
magnetic field lies on isobaric surfaces of
toroidal genus - The B field lines pitch
is constant on each nested
surface - (Isobaric) magnetic surfaces where q(Y)m/n have
a different topology there are alternate O and X
singular points that do not exist on irrational
surfaces axisymmetry is broken and divB0
allows a Br component - If current flows preferentially along certain
field lines, magnetic islands form - The contour of the island region is an isobar
(and isotemperature) - As a result, the plasma pressure tends to
flatten across the island region, (thermal
short-circuit) and energy confinement is degraded
7Tokamak equilibrium and helical perturbations
- Tokamak Equilibrium Magnetic field in terms of
axisymmetric flux function - 1 Force equilibrium
- Field line pitch
- Helically perturbed field
- 2 Equilibrium condition (local torque balance)
- To order(r/R)
Vanishing in axisymmetry
8Basic Formalism of evolution equations
- Reduced Resistive MHD Equations from vector to
scalar system - Compressional Alfven waves are removed
- Closure of system with fluid equations
- Ordering
- Filters physics
9Ideal and Resistive MHD
- In Ideal MHD Plasma Magnetic topology is
conserved - B is convected with V
- In Resistive MHD Magnetic field diffuses relative
to plasma topology - The evolution of linear magnetic perturbations
is - Topology can change through reconnection of field
lines in a resistive layer where - Resistive MHD removes
Ideal MHD constraint of preserved magnetic
topology allowing possible instabilities with
small growth rates -
- Key parameter
10Essential physics of tearing perturbations
- Quasineutrality constraint
- First order perturbation
- Competition of a stabilizing line bending term
and a kink term feeding instabilities
perpendicular current may alter balance, through
ion polarization current and neoclassical
viscosity - Tearing layer width is determined by balancing
inertial and parallel current contributions to
quasineutrality - The time evolution of the perturbations is
governed by Faraday law and generalised forms of
Ohms law, including external non inductive
contributions
w dependent!
11Current driven tearing modes physics
Boundary Layer problem
Outer region - marginal ideal MHD - kink mode.
The torque balance requires
A linear perturbation is governed by an
equation that is singular on the mode rational
surface where kB 0
ys
Singularity at qm/n !!
Solved with proper boundary conditions to
determine the discontinuity of the derivative
Ys reconnected helicalflux
12Current driven tearing modes physics
- The discontinuous derivative equivalent to
currents, localised in a layer across the qm/n
surface, where ideal MHD breaks down - Amperes law relates the dB perturbation to the
current perturbation. For long, thin islands, it
can be written - Integrating this over a period in x and out to a
large distance, l, from the rational surface
(wltltlltltrs) gives - Inner region - includes effects of inertia,
resistivity, drifts, viscosity, etc
y
-l
l
Linear Dispersion relation
Linear
Growth rate
13Geometry Terminology
- contours of constant helical flux
- magnetic shear length cylindrical safety
factor - island instantaneous phase
- xr-rs slab coordinate from rational surface
q(rs)m/n - helical flux reconnected on the rational surface
- integrals and averages
on island
x
?
14Neoclassical Tearing Modes (NTM)
- In a tearing-stable plasma (?0lt0)
- Initial island large enough to flatten the local
pressure - gt loss of bootstrap current inside the island
sustains perturbation - Instability due to local flattening of bootstrap
current profile - Typically islands with m/n 2/1 or 3/2
periodicity Can prevent tokamaks from reaching
high ?
15Summary of RMHD equations
- Resistive-neoclassical MHD fluid model
16Bootstrap Current
Mechanism of bootstrap current
Constant on magnetic surfaces
Generalised parallel Ohms law with electron
viscosity effects
Electron viscous stress damps the poloidal
electron flow - new free energy source.
17The NTM drive mechanism
Consider an initial small seed island
Perturbed flux surfaces lines of constant W
- An initial perturbation( Wseed) leads to the
formation of a magnetic island - The pressure is flattened within the island at
the O point, not at X point - Thus the bootstrap current is removed inside the
island - This current perturbation amplifies the
magneticfield perturbation,i.e. the island
18Construction of the nonlinear island equation
- 1-A nonlinear averaging operator over the helical
angle xmq-nf-wt makes - 2-The parallel current is obtained solving the
current closure (quasineutrality) equation
,averaging and and inserting it in Amperes law -
- 3-Averaging Faraday law and eliminating ltJ//gt
gives - 4-An integration weighted with cosx, over the
radial extent of the nonlinear reconnection layer
(island ), one obtains the basic Rutherford
Equation for - W(t) 4(?Br rs / B? nq/)1/2
neoclassical currents
R.F.Current drive
Grad-Shafranov equation
19Modified Rutherford Equation
NTM evolution (Integrating Faraday-Ampere on
island)
geom. factor
(de)stabilising factor, lt0 in NTM ( TM)
Jbootstrap Term gt0
pressure gradient curvature Term lt0
Polarisation Term gt0, lt0
Electron Cyclotron CD Term
resistive wall Term
G.Ramponi, E. Lazzaro, S. Nowak, PoP 1999
20Threshold Physics Makes an NTM Linearly Stable
and Non-linearly Unstable
? rs
- polarization threshold
- (A.Smolyakov, E.Lazzaro et al, 1995)
- ion polarization currents
- for ions E X B drifts are stronger than for
electrons ?J? is generated. J? is not divergence
free ?J// varies such that 0
- transport threshold
- (R.Fitzpatrick ,1995)
- related to transverse plasma heat
- conductivity that partially removes
- the pressure flattening
- 1 cm
-
wpol? (Lq/Lp) 1/2 ? 1/2 ??I 2 cm
- c(?,?i) polarization term also depends on
frequency of rotating mode, stabilizing only if
0gt?gt??i (J, Connor,H.R. Wilson et.al,1996)
21The Modified Rutherford Equation discussion
- Need to generate seed island
- additional MHD event
- poorly understood?
- Stable solution
- saturated island width
- well understood?
w
Wsat
Wthres
- Unstable solution
- Threshold
- poorly understood
- needs improved transport model
- need improved polarisation current
22Threshold Physics Makes an NTM Linearly Stable
and Non-linearly Unstable
?rs
m/n2/1
unstable
?rs-2
rs1.54 m a2 m
?p0.6
stable
?1/2 ?Lq/Lp?0.56 c(?) 1
23rabs rO-point- 3 cm
The islands can be reduced in width or completely
suppressed by a current driven by Electron
Cyclotron waves (ECCD) accurately located within
the island.
rabs rO-point
rabs rO-point 1 cm
rabs rO-point 2 cm
A requisite for an effective control action is
the ability of identifying the relevant state
variables in real time -radial location -EC
power absorption radius - frequency and
phase and vary accordingly the control variables
-wave beam power modulation -wave beam
direction.
24 Co-CD can replace the missing bootstrap current
Localized Co-CD at mode rational surface may both
increase the linear stability and replace the
missing bootstrap current
where Hm,n efficiency by which a helical
component is created by island flux surface
averaging H0,0 modification of equilibrium
current profile
25 CD efficiency to replace the missing bootstrap
current
- Hm,n depends on
- w/wcd
- whether the CD is continuous or modulated to
turn it on in phase with the rotating O-point - on the radial misalignment of CD w.r.t. the
rational surface qm/n
50 on - 50 off
No-misalignment
26Larger CD efficiency with narrow JCD profiles
- Note
- within the used model, in case of perfect
alignment, the (2,1) mode is fully suppressed
with 50 modulated EC power, Icd 3 Ip(rs) (PEC
7 MW by FS UL), when wcd 2.5 cm - larger wcd would reduce the saturated island
width (partial stabilization) - narrow, well localized Jcd profiles are a major
request for the ITER UL!
--- stable
27Elements of the problem of control of NTM by
Local absorption of EC waves
- The STATE variables of the process are the mode
helicity numbers (m,n), the radial location rm/n,
the width W (in cm!) of the island, and its
rotation frequency w. - The CONTROL variables of the system dedicated to
island chase suppression are the radius rdep,
of deposition the wave beam power depending on
the wave BEAM LAUNCHING ANGLES , the power pulse
rate (CW or modulated) - It is necessary to define and design real-time
diagnostic and predictive methods for the
dynamics of the process and of the controlling
action, considering available alternatives and
complementary possibilities
28Approach to the problem
- One of the most important objectives of the
control task is to prevent an island to grow to
its nonlinear saturation level (that is too
large) - It is necessary to detect its size W, and its
rotation frequency w as early as possible after
some trigger event has started the instability. - Therefore the analysis of dynamics in the linear
range near the threshold is important to be able
to construct a useful real-time predictor
algorithm. - Key questions then are observability and
controllability - The work is in progress
29Linearized equation near threshold
Dimensionless state variables and linearization
near threshold WWt wwT
Linear state system
Mode amplitude x1 and frequency x2 are coupled
through a12
Control vector
EC driven current
External momentum input
30Controllability and observability of the system
The dynamic system is controllable if its state
variables respond to the control
variables According to Kalman controllability
matrix Q b,Ab must be of full rank
amplitude control b1 frequency control b2
rank (Q)2 if both b1 and b2 are non zero
In our case the condition, mode rotation control
is necessary
EC driven current
External momentum input
31Formal aspects of the control problem
- The physical objective is to reduce the ECE
fluctuation to zero in minimal time using ECRH
/ECCD on the position qm/n identified by the
phase jump method - The TM control problem in the extended Rutherford
form, belongs to a general class multistage
decision processes . In a linearized form
the governing equation for the state vector x(t)
is - with the initial condition x(0)x0, and a control
variable (steering function) u(t). - The formal problem consists in reducing the state
x(t) to zero in minimal time by a suitable choice
of the steering function u(t) - Several interesting properties of this problem
have been studied - J.P. LaSalle, Proc. Nat. Acad. Of Sciences
45, 573-577 (1959) R.Bellman ,I. Glicksberg
O.Gross, On the bang-bang control problem Q.
Appl. Math.14 11-18 (1956)
32Formal aspects of the control problem
- Definition An admissible (piecewise
measurable in a set ? ) steering function u is
optimal if for some tgt0 x(t,u) 0 and if
x(t,u)?0 for 0lt tlt t for all u(t) ? ? - Theorem 1
- Anything that can be done by an admissible
steering function can also be done by a bang-bang
function - Theorem 2
- If for the control problem there exists a
steering function u(t) ? ? such that x(t,u)0,
for tgt0, then there is an optimal steering
function u in ?. - All optimal steering functions u are of the
bang-bang form - Thus the only way of reaching the objective in
minimum time is by using properly all the power
available - Steering times can be chosen testing x(t lt e
u(t)
t
33Concept of experimental set-up for ECCD control
of Tearing modes
(RM, ZM)
a
rdep
- Just align strategyFind optimal angles a,b to
minimize - when
34Estimate of a priori rdep(a,b)
example of minimization of rdep(a,b) rm/n2
Best poloidal angle a for three toroidal angles
b(0, p/18. p/9)
35Experiments of automatic TM stabilization by
ECRH/CD on FTU
36Island recognition with Te diagnostics
dTe/T0
(r-r m,n)/Wc
Multiple zeros possible
Te flattening ? loss of bootstrap
current ? rotating NTM ? antisymmetric Te
oscillations
ECH (associated with ECCD) may mask strict
antisymmetry
37Correlation of the ECE fluctuations measured
between nearby channels , both for natural and
heated islands (e.g. r1rs-x, r2rsx)
Position rm/n,mea measurement
- The phase jump is effective on detecting the
qm/n radius, but not unconditionally robust - The concavity of the sequence of Pij is a robust
observable that gives the radial position rm/n
of qm/n
38Principle of risland tracking algorithm
Pij 1 if both i and j are on the same side with
respect to the island O-point. Pij -1 if on
opposite sides.
A positive concavity in the Pij sequence locates
the island.
39Position risland measurement from three ECE
channels
Example of real-time data processing for O-point
location in the ECEn space
Gain
High-pass filter
Correlation
Second derivative ? maxima (minima)
J. Berrino,E. Lazzaro,S. Cirant et al., Nucl.
Fusion 45 (2005) 1350
40Tracking of rational surfaces rm/n
FTU
AUG
- Finite ECE resolution (channel width and
separation) - false positives (mode multiplicity, axis,
sawteeth...) - intermittancy of the measurement (small island or
short integration time...)
41Algorithms for real time NTM control
- Information for control from diagnostic
process model, assimilated in a Bayesian approach - Control/Decision variables mode amplitude W(t)
, frequency and radial locations rNTM, rdep - Actuator basic control variables beam steering
angle a, and Power modulation
42Assimilation (Bayesian filtering)
likelihood function , measured data
a-posteriori pdf
a-priori pdf, estimated data
evidence
- uncertainty reduction
- continuity of the observation (even if there is
no mode) - regularize the observation
- evidence is available for confidence in the
decisions
43Algorithms for real time NTM control
a priori PDF
Likelihood
a posteriori PDF
- Cross-correlation Estimate for ECW power rdep in
shot 17107 in ASDEX -U - From left chann.-Xcorrelation, a priori PDF,
chann. Likelihood, a posteriori PDF
Bayesian Filter p(rd)L(dr)p(r)/p(d)?
L(dr)p(r)
44Algorithms for real time NTM control
Bayesian Filter p(rd)L(dr)p(r)/p(d)
- Real time estimate ECW power rdep (t) for shot
17107 in ASDEX-U (G. DAntona et al, Proc.,
Varenna 2007 - Evidence p(d)
45ECRH power deposition at different R by changes
of the angle of the mirror
FTU Btor 5.6 T
EC beam
Gyrotron 3
ECE channels
Gyrotron 1
mirror
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12
Resonance 140GHz
plasma axis
46FTU Shot 27714real-time recognition rdep
fmod,Gy1 100 Hz fmod,Gy3 110 Hz
Correlation functions of the two gyrotrons
Gyrotron 1
The deposition radius of each beam is detected
by the maximum in ?Te,ECE -ECH correlation.
Different beams are recognized by different
ECH timing.
Pi,A
Plasma axis
Pi,B
47MHD control in FTU (2 ECW beams)
ch.3 (gy.1 deposition)
ch.2
Mode hit and suppressed !
ch.1 (gy.3 deposition)
gy.3
gy 3 on
gy.1
Mode Trigger (sawtooth?)
action low ? high duty cycle
t feedback ON0.4 s
48References
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(1995) 5 H.R. Wilson et al., Plasma Phys.
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al., Nucl.Fusion 39, 107, (1999) 7 G.Ramponi,
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(1999) 8 Smolyakov, E.Lazzaro et al., Plasma
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J. Berrino, S. Cirant, F.Gandini, G. Granucci,
E.Lazzaro ,F. Jannone, P. Smeulders and
G.DAntona IEEE Trans 2005
49FINE