Disruptions, Disruptivity, and Safer Operating Windows in the High-β Spherical Torus NSTX
Author(s) -
S. P. Gerhardt,
A. Diallo,
D. Gates,
B.P. LeBlanc,
J. Ménard,
D. Mueller,
S.A. Sabbagh,
V. Soukhanovskii,
K. Tritz
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1057024
Subject(s) - current (fluid) , torus , physics , rotation (mathematics) , spherical tokamak , plasma , mechanics , atomic physics , magnetohydrodynamics , tearing , core (optical fiber) , limit (mathematics) , tokamak , nuclear physics , geometry , optics , mathematics , thermodynamics , mathematical analysis
This paper discusses disruption rates, disruption causes, and disruptivity statistics in the high- βN National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) [M. Ono, et al. Nuclear Fusion 40, 557 (2000)]. While the overall disruption rate is rather high, configurations with high βN , moderate q*, strong boundary shaping, sufficient rotation, and broad pressure and current profiles are found to have the lowest disruptivity; active n=1 control further reduces the disruptivity. The disruptivity increases rapidly for q*<2.7, which is substantially above the ideal MHD current limit. In quiescent conditions, qmin >1.25 is generally acceptable for avoiding the onset of core rotating n=1 kink/tearing modes; when EPM and ELM disturbances are present, the required qmin for avoiding those modes is raised to ~1.5. The current ramp and early flat-top phase of the discharges are prone to n=1 core rotating modes locking to the wall, leading to a disruption. Small changes to the discharge fueling during this phase can often mitigate the rotation damping associated with these modes and eliminate the disruption. The largest stored energy disruptions are those that occur at high current when a plasma current rampdown is initiated incorrectly
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