Open Access
Aspect Ratio Scaling of Ideal No-wall Stability Limits in High Bootstrap Fraction Tokamak Plasmas
Author(s) -
J. Ménard,
Martin Bell,
R. E. Bell,
D. Gates,
S. Kaye,
B.P. LeBlanc,
R. Maingi,
S. A. Sabbagh,
V. Soukhanovskii,
D. Stutman
Publication year - 2003
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/820210
Subject(s) - tokamak , bootstrap current , plasma , aspect ratio (aeronautics) , magnetohydrodynamic drive , physics , scaling , beta (programming language) , magnetohydrodynamics , magnetic confinement fusion , magnetic field , mechanics , computational physics , nuclear physics , atomic physics , mathematics , geometry , optoelectronics , computer science , quantum mechanics , programming language
Recent experiments in the low aspect ratio National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) [M. Ono et al., Nucl. Fusion 40 (2000) 557] have achieved normalized beta values twice the conventional tokamak limit at low internal inductance and with significant bootstrap current. These experimental results have motivated a computational re-examination of the plasma aspect ratio dependence of ideal no-wall magnetohydrodynamic stability limits. These calculations find that the profile-optimized no-wall stability limit in high bootstrap fraction regimes is well described by a nearly aspect ratio invariant normalized beta parameter utilizing the total magnetic field energy density inside the plasma. However, the scaling of normalized beta with internal inductance is found to be strongly aspect ratio dependent at sufficiently low aspect ratio. These calculations and detailed stability analyses of experimental equilibria indicate that the nonrotating plasma no-wall stability limit has been exceeded by as much as 30% in NSTX in a high bootstrap fraction regime