APS Logo

Pedestal confinement degradation in DIII-D ELMy H-mode plasmas with density ramp

POSTER

Abstract

In a DIII-D ELMy H-mode experiment with closed (small-angle-slot) divertor, as line-integrated electron density is increased by gas injection, electron pressure at the pedestal top and its gradient in the pedestal decrease, accompanied with increase of collision frequency υe. Experimental pedestal pressure pexp agrees with EPED prediction peped at low υe but is below peped as υe increases. The ratio of pexp and peped correlates with υe as pexp/peped∝υe-0.38. Two branches of low-k (kθρs~0.1) magnetic and density fluctuations are detected by Faraday-effect polarimeter and Beam-Emission-Spectroscopy (BES) in the pedestal, respectively, one at low frequency (3-7 kHz) propagating in ion diamagnetic direction while the other at high frequency (200-500 kHz) propagating in electron diamagnetic direction. Fluctuation amplitudes for both branches increase as υe increases and pedestal degrades. The high-frequency branch has been identified as micro-tearing-modes [1] while the low-frequency branch is found consistent with kinetic-ballooning-modes [2], both of which can be destabilized by collisions. These observations indicate collision-destabilized turbulence may be critical to explain the pedestal degradation.

[1] Phys. Plasmas 28, 022506, 2021

[2] APS DPP 2020, TP15.015

Presenters

  • Jie Chen

    University of California, Los Angeles

Authors

  • Jie Chen

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • David L Brower

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Richard J Groebner

    General Atomics - San Diego

  • Zheng Yan

    University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin, Madison

  • Terry L Rhodes

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Weixing Ding

    University of Science and Technology of China, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Shaun R Haskey

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • Kshitish Kumar Barada

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Florian M. Laggner

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • Santanu Banerjee

    William & Mary, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory