Title :
Multiple source 2.45 to 28 GHz electron cyclotron heating on the levitated dipole experiment
Author :
Woskov, P.P. ; Kesner, J. ; Michael, P.C. ; Garnier, D.T. ; Mauel, M.E.
Author_Institution :
Plasma & Sci. Fusion Center, MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
The levitated dipole experiment (LDX) is investigating a magnetic dipole field configuration similar to planetary magnetospheres as an alterative confinement concept for fusion plasmas. Recent experiments have confirmed that stationary, highly peaked plasma density profiles (> 50 core to edge) are formed by the conservation of the product of plasma density and differential flux tube volume (V = ∮dl/B). These natural peaked profiles are maintained by ambient plasma turbulence, contrary to experience with plasmas inside a set of coils where turbulence acts to flatten profiles. LDX uses a 1.1 MA, 34 cm mean radius, 560 kg superconducting coil (F-coil) that is freely floated by a 280 kA levitating coil for over 2 hours between cryogenic recoolings. Plasmas are started and sustained by electron cyclotron heating (ECH) on closed flux surfaces encircling the F-coil that cross the outer midplane radius between 67 and 177 cm. The magnetic field strength varies from 0.007 to 3.2 Tesla around the F-coil on these flux surfaces corresponding to EC resonance between 0.2 to 90 GHz. Consequently, ECH in a magnetic dipole is possible with a multiplicity of sources at many frequencies.
Keywords :
plasma confinement; plasma radiofrequency heating; plasma sources; plasma turbulence; F-coil; Vlasov cut launcher; cryogenic recoolings; differential flux tube volume; electron cyclotron heating; fusion plasmas; gyrotron beam; klystron sources; levitated dipole experiment; levitating coil; magnetic dipole field; magnetron; multiple source; plasma density; plasma power deposition; superconducting coil; turbulence; waveguides; Cyclotrons; Electrons; Heating; Magnetic confinement; Magnetic flux; Magnetic levitation; Magnetosphere; Plasma confinement; Plasma density; Superconducting magnets;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 2010 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Norfolk, VA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5474-7
Electronic_ISBN :
0730-9244
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2010.5533986