Quasi-axisymmetric stellarators with varying rotational transform profiles
ORAL
Abstract
The rotational transform ι affects almost all aspects of toroidal magnetic confinement devices, including particle orbits, turbulent transport, and more.
We optimize a set of vacuum quasi-axisymmetric (QA) stellarator configurations for varying ι-profiles. By optimizing for quasisymmetry alongside different values of mean ι or mean shear, we are able to assess the compatibility of different ι-profiles with quasisymmetry. For a class of two-field period quasisymmetric configurations based on the vacuum QA configuration in [Phys. Rev. Lett. 128 (2022) 035001], we find that good quasisymmetry is limited to mean ι ≲ 0.8. Increasing ι requires increasing the flux-surface elongation, which sets this limit. Since the fast-particle confinement improves with increasing ι, this creates a trade-off between elongation and confinement.
We also investigate the effect of ι and shear on gyrokinetic turbulence. Using linear gyrokinetic stella simulations, we find that the growth rates increase with ι, while shifting towards smaller scales. At low-order rational values of ι, growth rates calculated on a single flux-tube may deviate significantly from values calculated at nearby ι. A smooth dependence on ι is recovered by running simulations on several flux tubes.
We optimize a set of vacuum quasi-axisymmetric (QA) stellarator configurations for varying ι-profiles. By optimizing for quasisymmetry alongside different values of mean ι or mean shear, we are able to assess the compatibility of different ι-profiles with quasisymmetry. For a class of two-field period quasisymmetric configurations based on the vacuum QA configuration in [Phys. Rev. Lett. 128 (2022) 035001], we find that good quasisymmetry is limited to mean ι ≲ 0.8. Increasing ι requires increasing the flux-surface elongation, which sets this limit. Since the fast-particle confinement improves with increasing ι, this creates a trade-off between elongation and confinement.
We also investigate the effect of ι and shear on gyrokinetic turbulence. Using linear gyrokinetic stella simulations, we find that the growth rates increase with ι, while shifting towards smaller scales. At low-order rational values of ι, growth rates calculated on a single flux-tube may deviate significantly from values calculated at nearby ι. A smooth dependence on ι is recovered by running simulations on several flux tubes.
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Presenters
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Stefan Buller
University of Maryland, College Park
Authors
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Stefan Buller
University of Maryland, College Park
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Matt Landreman
University of Maryland
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Jonathan Kappel
University of Maryland
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Rahul Gaur
University of Maryland, Princeton University