Are magnetic resonances practical transport controllers in fusion plasmas? the TJ-II experience

D. López-Bruna, V. I. Vargas, J. A. Romero

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículo de la conferenciarevisión exhaustiva

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Resumen

The TJ-II stellarator is a mid-size Heliac design (high rotational transform, low magnetic shear) that allows for external control of the rotational transform profile. The long experience with locating diverse magnetic resonances at different plasma radii has assessed their reliability as transport controllers: in low density electron cyclotron heating plasmas, a "transport barrier effect" is found in most of the confinement zone accompanying magnetic resonances; in higher density and beta plasmas under neutral-beam heating operation, resonant layers show a clear incidence on the access to the H-mode of confinement or, likewise, on the back transition to L-mode. Moreover, confinement events similar to tokamak phenomenology have been also related with magneto-hydrodynamic activity around the magnetic resonances and are, consequently, amenable to external control. All in all, the TJ-II experience posits magnetic resonances as natural transport and stability controllers in toroidal plasmas. Further studies must either confirm or set operational limits to these findings.

Idioma originalInglés
Número de artículo012013
PublicaciónJournal of Physics: Conference Series
Volumen591
N.º1
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 24 mar 2015
Publicado de forma externa
Evento15th Latin American Workshop on Plasma Physics, LAWPP 2014 and 21st IAEA TM on Research Using Small Fusion Devices, RUSFD 2014 - San Jose, Costa Rica
Duración: 27 ene 201431 ene 2014

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