1. Higher Fusion Power Gain with Current and Pressure Profile Control in Strongly Shaped DIII-D Tokamak Plasmas
- Author
-
Lazarus, EA, Navratil, GA, Greenfield, CM, Strait, EJ, Austin, ME, Burrell, KH, Casper, TA, Baker, DR, DeBoo, JC, Doyle, EJ, Durst, R, Ferron, JR, Forest, CB, Gohil, P, Groebner, RJ, Heidbrink, WW, Hong, R-M, Houlberg, WA, Howald, AW, Hsieh, C-L, Hyatt, AW, Jackson, GL, Kim, J, Lao, LL, Lasnier, CJ, Leonard, AW, Lohr, J, La Haye, RJ, Maingi, R, Miller, RL, Murakami, M, Osborne, TH, Perkins, LJ, Petty, CC, Rettig, CL, Rhodes, TL, Rice, BW, Sabbagh, SA, Schissel, DP, Scoville, JT, Snider, RT, Staebler, GM, Stallard, BW, Stambaugh, RD, St. John, HE, Stockdale, RE, Taylor, PL, Thomas, DM, Turnbull, AD, Wade, MR, Wood, R, and Whyte, D
- Subjects
Mathematical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering ,General Physics - Abstract
Fusion power has been increased by a factor of 3 in DIII-D by tailoring the pressure profile to avoid the kink instability in H-mode plasmas. The resulting plasmas are found to have neoclassical ion confinement. This reduction in transport losses in beam-heated plasmas with negative central shear is correlated with a dramatic reduction in density fluctuations. Improved magnetohydrodynamic stability is achieved by controlling the plasma pressure profile width. In deuterium plasmas the highest gain Q (the ratio of fusion power to input power), was 0.0015, corresponding to an equivalent Q of 0.32 in a deuterium-tritium plasma. © 1996 The American Physical Society.
- Published
- 1996