Influence of Plasma and Machine Parameters on Time to First ELM in DIII-D
POSTER
Abstract
Feature selection via multilinear regression is performed on 506 H-mode discharges on DIII-D, highlighting the parameters most influential on the timing of the first edge-localized-mode (ELM) event after an L-H transition. This database study illuminates key parameters that can be used to delay the advent of ELMs after entering H-mode, extending the window for establishing ELM-suppression via resonant magnetic perturbations (RMPs) to avoid damaging plasma-facing components in ITER or future fusion reactors. Database time-to-first-ELM in DIII-D ranged from <10 ms to 1200 ms, and all discharges using RMP or no-ELM regimes were excluded. Results show linear correlations between poloidal beta and ohmic power sampled at the L-H transition and the time-to-first-ELM, especially in discharge subgroups with similar triangularity. Increased plasma pressure at the L-H transition and the strength of the plasma shape appear to influence the time-to-first-ELM. This investigation will be further generalized with additional machines in an effort to avoid systematic errors and provide suggestions for optimizing RMP application before the first ELM in future devices.
Presenters
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Daniel A Burgess
Columbia University
Authors
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Daniel A Burgess
Columbia University
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A. O Nelson
Columbia University, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
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Carlos A Paz-Soldan
Columbia University