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Nuclear fusion is an extremely attractive option for future generations to compete with the strong increase in energy consumption. Proper control of the fusion plasma is mandatory to reach the ambitious objectives set while preserving the machine's integrity, which requests a large number of plasma diagnostic systems. Due to the large neutron flux expected in the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), regular windows or fibre optics are unusable and were replaced by so-called metallic first mirrors (FMs) embedded in the neutron shielding, forming an optical labyrinth. Materials eroded from the first wall reactor through physical or chemical sputtering will migrate and will be deposited onto mirrors. Mirrors subject to net deposition will suffer from reflectivity losses due to the deposition of impurities. Cleaning systems of metallic FMs are required in more than 20 optical diagnostic systems in ITER. Plasma cleaning using radio frequency (RF) generated plasmas is currently being considered the most promising in situ cleaning technique. An update of recent results obtained with this technique will be presented. These include the demonstration of cleaning of several deposit types (beryllium, tungsten and beryllium proxy, i.e. aluminium) at 13.56 or 60 MHz as well as large scale cleaning (mirror size: 200 x 300 mm(2)). Tests under a strong magnetic field up to 3.5 T in laboratory and first experiments of RF plasma cleaning in EAST tokamak will also be discussed. A specific focus will be given on repetitive cleaning experiments performed on several FM material candidates.
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limited'' configuration, where the main plasma touches the reactor wall, and the contact point defines the Last Closed Flux Surface (LCFS). In this thesis, we advance the understanding of SOL physics in limited plasmas, combining experiments and numerical simulations. In particular, two topics are addressed. First, the separation between the
near'' and ``far'' SOL is investigated. The near SOL extends typically a few mm from the LCFS, features steep radial profiles of parallel heat flux and is responsible for the peak of heat deposition on the tokamak first wall. The far SOL, typically a few cm wide, features flatter heat flux profiles, and accounts for the majority of the heat deposited on the first wall. Secondly, blob dynamics is investigated. Blobs are high density plasma filaments generated by turbulence, and are an ubiquitous feature of plasmas in open magnetic field lines. The blobs travel outwards to the reactor walls, increasing the cross field transport. Dedicated experiments have been performed on the TCV tokamak. Inboard-limited Deuterium (D) and Helium (He) plasma discharges are performed, varying the main plasma parameters (current, density and shaping). The parallel heat flux radial profiles are determined with infrared thermography. For the first time, the presence of a near SOL in TCV limited plasmas is reported, both for D and He discharges. The near SOL is found to disappear for high plasma resistivity. Non-ambipolar currents are measured to flow to the wall in the near SOL using Langmuir probes, and their presence is found to correlate with the strength of the near SOL heat fluxes. A simple interpretation is given. The heat fluxes and electric potentials are also measured on the low field side using a reciprocating Langmuir probe, and compared with the ones measured on the tokamak wall. A method for the mitigation and suppression of the near SOL heat fluxes through impurity seeding is proposed, and first experimental evidences are presented. The experiments are compared with numerical simulations of the TCV SOL, performed with the GBS code. The simulated parallel heat flux profiles qualitatively agree with the experimental ones, showing the presence of a near and far SOL. Also, non-ambipolar currents are observed to flow to the wall. The effect of resistivity is investigated through a second simulation with a 40 times higher resistivity. The blob dynamics in TCV is investigated using a conditional average sampling technique on the reciprocating Langmuir probe data. The results for two discharges, for low and high resistivity respectively, are discussed. A blob detection and tracking algorithm is applied to the numerical simulation outputs, and the results are discussed.