APS Logo

Scrape-off layer power fall-off length broadening in H-mode with reduced negative triangularity on DIII-D

POSTER

Abstract

Small ELM regimes are viewed as promising scenarios for managing the core-edge integration challenge via reducing the transient heat loads typical of type-I ELMy scenarios while simultaneously avoiding any large reductions in core performance. One such regime is negative triangularity H-modes at reduced shaping, i.e. reduced NT H-mode, which generally have near zero, but positive lower triangularity and negative upper triangularity no greater than −0.1. This reduced NT H-mode regime has similar stored energy values to standard type-I regimes for the relatively low pedestal height while displaying the characteristics of small ELMs: reduced energies delivered to the divertor, lower peak heat flux amplitudes, and higher frequencies than the standard type-I ELMs. Moreover the correlation between these reduced NT H-modes’s $\lambda_{q}$ broadening beyond the $B_{pol}^(-1)$ scaling and with reduced rotation shear indicate a favorable path for achieving a core-edge solution with higher stored energy while reducing the normalized ELM size and broadening the heat flux profile. All these characteristics make it a promising regime for a future fusion reactor.

Presenters

  • Peter J Traverso

    Oak Ridge Assoc University

Authors

  • Peter J Traverso

    Oak Ridge Assoc University

  • Matthias Knolker

    General Atomics

  • Max E Austin

    University of Texas Austin, University of Texas at Austin

  • Kyle Callahan

    University of California, Los Angeles, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education

  • Kenneth R Gage

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Filipp Khabanov

    University of Wisconsin Madison, University of Wisconsin, Madison, University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Charlie Lasnier

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • Anthony W Leonard

    General Atomics

  • G. R McKee

    University of Wisconsin Madison, University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Thomas H Osborne

    General Atomics

  • Terry Rhodes

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Samuel Stewart

    University of Wisconsin - Madison