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Profile Modifications Resulting from Early High-harmonic Fast Wave heating in NSTX
Author(s) -
J.E. Mendard,
J.R. LeBlanc Wilson,
S.A. Sabbagh,
D. Stutman,
D. W. Swain
Publication year - 2001
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/784550
Subject(s) - plasma , atomic physics , harmonics , electron , physics , chemistry , voltage , nuclear physics , quantum mechanics
Experiments have been performed in the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) to inject high harmonic fast wave (HHFW) power early during the plasma current ramp-up in an attempt to reduce the current penetration rate to raise the central safety factor during the flattop phase of the discharge. To date, up to 2 MW of HHFW power has been coupled to deuterium plasmas as early as t = 50 ms using the slowest interstrap phasing of k|| approximately equals 14 m(superscript)-1 (nf = 24). Antenna-plasma gap scans have been performed and find that for small gaps (5-8 cm), electron heating is observed with relatively small density rises and modest reductions in current penetration rate. For somewhat larger gaps (10-12 cm), weak electron heating is observed but with a spontaneous density rise at the plasma edge similar to that observed in NSTX H-modes. In the larger gap configuration, EFIT code reconstructions (without MSE [motional Stark effect]) find that resistive flux consumption is reduced as much as 30%, the internal inductance is maintained below 0.6 at 1 MA into the flattop, q(0) is increased significantly, and the MHD stability character of the discharges is strongly modified

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