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Achieving Low-Collisionalty Small/Grassy ELMs in DIII-D High-Performance Hybrid Scenario Plasmas

POSTER

Abstract

Low-collisionality(nu_e*~0.1-0.4) small/grassy ELMs have been achieved in recent DIII-D high-performance hybrid scenario plasmas (beta_N~3.5, beta_p~2.0, H_98~1.6), with ITER similar shape and favorable direction. Stability analysis found that grassy ELMs with high-frequency >400Hz and small ELM energy loss <1.0% are located near the peeling boundary. The high >1.5 and low pedestal top collisionality nu_e*=0.1-0.4 are important in obtaining grassy ELMs on DIII-D. A branch of low-collisionality small ELMs is observed and its ELM size increases with the collisionality increase, which is opposite to the typical type-I ELM scaling. Long stationary phases of grassy ELMs have been achieved by using the n=3 RMP of 1.5kA I-coil current, without occasional large ELMs and without clear density pump out. Additionally, ELM frequency is further increased while the ELM size is further decreased for the RMP-assisted grassy ELMs. Divertor detachment was achieved with divertor N2 puffing, while high confinement with beta_N>3.0 is maintained. However, the pedestal density increases during detachment, and large ELM occurs. The study sheds light on a promising scenario with high core confinement, good edge impurity exhaust, and acceptant boundary heat load for ITER and future machines.

Presenters

  • Zeyu Li

    General Atomics

Authors

  • Zeyu Li

    General Atomics

  • Huiqian Wang

    General Atomics, General Atomics - San Diego

  • Xueqiao Xu

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • Raffi Nazikian

    General Atomics

  • Xi Chen

    General Atomics, GA

  • Vincent S Chan

    General Atomics - San Diego

  • Tom H Osborne

    General Atomics, General Atomics - San Diego

  • Theresa M Wilks

    MIT-PSFC, MIT

  • Qiming Hu

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

  • Filipp Khabanov

    Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin–Madison, University of Wisconsin- Madison, UWM

  • Guanying Yu

    University of California, Davis

  • Lei Zeng

    University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA

  • Nami Li

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory