Low temperature tungsten spectroscopy on a Penning Ionization Discharge

POSTER

Abstract

Complete Tungsten divertor operation is being planned on many tokamaks including Tore Supra and ITER. Thus, low temperature tungsten spectroscopy is important for aiding the divertor diagnostics on larger machines. A Penning Ionization Discharge (PID) at the Johns Hopkins University produces steady state plasmas with $T_e \sim 2$ eV, $n_e \sim 10^{13}$ cm$^{-3}$ and a fast electron fraction at $\sim 10$s eV. Similar bi-Maxwellian distributions, but with slightly higher electron temperatures, are found in the divertor plasmas of tokamaks. The two significant populating mechanisms for higher charge states in the PID are: (a) collisional excitation from bulk electrons, and (b) inner shell ionization from the fast electrons. The PID is diagnosed in a wide wavelength range - XUV, VUV and visible, to differentiate the two populating mechanisms. W is introduced in the PID by the sputtering of cathodes made of CuW alloy. Spectral emission from significantly higher charge states of W (up to W IV) has been observed in the experiment. This poster will describe results indicating the populating mechanism of W ions and also describe plans on upgrading the experiment to achieve higher temperatures which are closer to the divertor conditions.

Authors

  • Deepak Kumar

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Alexander Englesbe

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Dan Stutman

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Michael Finkenthal

    Johns Hopkins University