Formation of a High Pressure Staircase Pedestal with Suppressed Edge-Localized-Modes in the DIII-D Tokamak

ORAL

Abstract

We observe the formation of a high-pressure two-step staircase pedestal ($\approx $ 16-20 kPa) in the DIII-D tokamak when large amplitude Edge-Localized-Modes are suppressed using resonant magnetic perturbations. The pedestal oscillates between the staircase and a single step structure every 40-60 ms, correlated with oscillations in the heat and particle flux to the divertor. Gyrokinetic analysis using the CGYRO code shows that when the heat and particle flux to the divertor decreases, the pedestal broadens and the E\texttimes B shear at the mid-pedestal decreases, triggering a transport bifurcation from Kinetic-Ballooning-Mode (KBM) to Trapped-Electron-Mode (TEM) limited transport that flattens the density and temperature profiles at mid-pedestal and results in the formation of the staircase pedestal. The reverse transition from staircase to one-step pedestal takes place as the heat and particle fluxes to the divertor increase. Our results suggest that in the reactor-scale tokamaks for which the efficacy of ExB shear is reduced (e.g. ITER), enhanced ion-scale transport can be locally contained with the formation of staircase pedestal, leading to the increase in pedestal pressure and improved confinement.

Authors

  • Arash Ashourvan

    PPPL, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • Raffi Nazikian

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton Plasma Physics Lab, PPPL

  • Walter Guttenfelder

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, PPPL

  • Shaun Haskey

    PPPL, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, PPPL, Princeton, NJ

  • Brian Grierson

    PPPL, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • J Candy

    General Atomics

  • D Eldon

    General Atomics

  • C.C. Petty

    General Atomics, GA, General Atomics, San Diego, CA

  • Emily Belli

    General Atomics, GA

  • George McKee

    University of Wisconsin, UW-Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison, U. Wisconsin-Madison, U Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin - Madison, UWisc. Madison, WI, University of Wisconsin Madison

  • C Lasnier

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory