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Influence of up-down asymmetry in plasma shape on the plasma response to RMPs and it's implication on ELM control

ORAL

Abstract

The 3D plasma response provides a candidate explanation for the inability to access RMP-ELM suppression at DN plasma shapes in tokamaks, namely that the resonant coupling is reduced in such shapes. Recent RMP-ELM control experiments in KSTAR found that ELMs can be suppressed at LSN shape, while no suppression is obtained in DN shapes when dRsep<0.5 cm. To understand the influence of up-down asymmetry in plasma shape on RMP-ELM control, the 3D plasma response is investigated in both experiment and modeling by systematically morphing the plasma shape, whilst keeping other equilibrium quantities largely unchanged. It reveals that the edge resonant component of plasma response is strongly suppressed at DN shapes. This is validated through targeted comparison with experiments at KSTAR and EAST. KSTAR simulations show that edge resonance decreases as plasma shape approach DN, while EAST magnetic measurements are used to validate simulations. However, the linear MHD model of plasma response still has limitations in modeling ELM suppression access, as it cannot explain the inability of ELM suppression at USN shapes in KSTAR, nor predict the critical dRsep. These findings indicate that the plasma shape should be taken into consideration to maximize access to RMP-ELM control in future devices.

Publication: S. Gu et al 2022 Nucl. Fusion 62 076031

Presenters

  • Shuai Gu

    Oak Ridge Associated Universities, ORAU

Authors

  • Shuai Gu

    Oak Ridge Associated Universities, ORAU

  • Carlos A Paz-Soldan

    Columbia University

  • Yueqiang Q Liu

    General Atomics - San Diego, General Atomics

  • Youwen Sun

    ASIPP, Institute of Plasma Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

  • Jong-Kyu Park

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, U.S.A., PPPL

  • SeongMoo Yang

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, U.S.A., PPPL

  • SangKyeun Kim

    Princeton University, Princeton University, U.S.A., PPPL, PU

  • Y. In

    Ulsan Natl Inst of Sci & Tech, UNIST

  • YoungMu Jeon

    Natl Fusion Res Inst

  • Huihui Wang

    Institute of Plasma Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

  • Qun Ma

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Pengcheng Xie

    ASIPP, University of Science and Technology of China