Core Turbulence and Transport Dependence on Isotope Mass in Dimensionally Similar H-Mode Plasmas on DIII-D
ORAL
Abstract
The global energy confinement time is approximately 80% higher in low-rotation H-mode Deuterium (D) plasmas compared with dimensionally similar Hydrogen (H) plasmas, indicating an isotopic dependence that significantly exceeds that in the empirical scaling relation, τE~M0.19. Correspondingly, both electron and ion thermal diffusivity are nearly twice as high in H than D across much of the radius. Long-wavelength (ion-gyroscale) turbulence characteristic differences may partially explain the large transport differences. Spatiotemporal measurements of long-wavelength density fluctuations obtained with BES demonstrate the surprising result that the turbulence amplitude is lower in H than in D plasmas, in contrast to the higher transport, however other characteristics are consistent with higher transport. The turbulence radial correlation lengths are larger in the H-plasma (2.5 cm) compared to D (1.5 cm), consistent with larger turbulent step size, and the H and D wavenumber spectra differ, suggesting different turbulence modes. Comparisons with gyrokinetic simulations will be performed to identify underlying mechanisms for the isotope dependence, and implications for D-T plasmas in ITER.
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Presenters
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G. R McKee
University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Authors
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G. R McKee
University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin, Madison
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Kathreen E Thome
General Atomics, GA
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Zheng Yan
University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Kshitish Kumar Barada
University of California, Los Angeles
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Darin R Ernst
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
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Nathan T Howard
MIT
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Tomas Odstrcil
General Atomics - San Diego, General Atomics
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Tom H Osborne
General Atomics - San Diego, General Atomics
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Terry L Rhodes
University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA
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Lothar Schmitz
University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA