Title :
Results from the HIT-II coaxial helicity injection spherical tokamak
Author :
Nelson, B.A. ; Jarboe, T.R. ; Ewig, R. ; Hoffman, C.S. ; Holcomb, C.T. ; McCollam, K.J. ; Shumlak, U.
Author_Institution :
Washington Univ., Seattle, WA, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. The upgraded Helicity Injection Tokamak (HIT-II) extends coaxial helicity injection (CHI) to time scales longer than the wall resistive diffusion time. Analysis of HIT data and stability studies have developed a proposed mechanism for CHI current drive. This mechanism, consistent with these analyses, appears to be responsible for current drive inside the separatrix, and is summarized as follows: a hollow current profile plus a small (2-10 mm) edge vacuum region causes an n=1 external kink mode to go unstable at the edge; on a resistive diffusion time scale the equilibrium adjusts to this perturbation throughout the volume, producing a global helical magnetic structure locked to the electrons and not to the ions; the externally driven electrons on the open field lines cause the structure to rotate; the rotating structure, in turn, drags the electrons in the closed flux region producing current drive inside the separatrix.
Keywords :
Tokamak devices; plasma instability; plasma toroidal confinement; plasma transport processes; CHI current drive; HIT-II coaxial helicity injection spherical tokamak; closed flux region; current drive; edge vacuum region; electron dragging; externally driven electrons; global helical magnetic structure; n=1 external kink mode; open field lines; resistive diffusion time scale; rotating structure; separatrix; upgraded Helicity Injection Tokamak; wall resistive diffusion time; Coaxial components; Coils; Electrons; Feedback control; Magnetic flux; Magnetic reconnection; Plasma stability; Production; Steel; Tokamaks;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 1998. 25th Anniversary. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. 1998 IEEE International on
Conference_Location :
Raleigh, NC, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4792-7
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.1998.677904