Publication

Experimental analysis of suprathermal electrons generated by electron cyclotron waves in tokamak plasmas

Dahye Choi
2020
EPFL thesis
Abstract

This thesis focuses on the physics of suprathermal electrons generated by electron cyclotron (EC) waves in tokamak plasmas, which play an important role in the physics of current drive and energetic particle-driven instabilities. The suprathermal electron dynamics and their effect on the plasma stability have been experimentally studied utilizing high power EC waves, in the TCV tokamak of the Swiss Plasma Center at EPFL, Switzerland. A hard X-ray diagnostic, which measures the bremsstrahlung radiation of the suprathermal electrons in radial and energy spaces, has been mainly used for the analysis, and the measurement has been compared to an estimation made by Fokker-Planck modeling coupled with a hard X-ray synthetic diagnostic. In order to study the response of the suprathermal electrons to ECCD, ECCD modulation discharges have been developed. The time evolution of the hard X-ray profiles has been measured using coherent averaging techniques in order to observe the creation and relaxation of suprathermal electrons. Time-dependent Fokker-Planck modeling coupled with the hard X-ray synthetic diagnostic has been used to compare the experimental and simulation results, with various suprathermal electron transport models. A dependency of the radial transport of suprathermal electrons on the EC wave power has been demonstrated and a possibility of EC wave scattering has been addressed. The effect of the suprathermal electron population on the plasma stability has been studied, and in particular the destabilization and dynamics of the electron fishbone mode. The response of hard X-ray profiles to the internal kink mode has been observed directly by the hard X-ray diagnostic for the first time, at the frequency of the mode. The experimental evidence and a solution of a linear fishbone dispersion relation coupled to the Fokker-Planck modeling demonstrate the role of suprathermal electrons in destabilizing the fishbone mode and in particular the interaction of trapped electrons with the mode. This work provides the framework for a comprehensive understanding of the physics of suprathermal electrons related to ECCD, and explains how ECCD-generated suprathermal electrons behave in real and velocity spaces, and how they interact with and are redistributed by the MHD mode.

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A tokamak (ˈtoʊkəmæk; токамáк) is a device which uses a powerful magnetic field to confine plasma in the shape of a torus. The tokamak is one of several types of magnetic confinement devices being developed to produce controlled thermonuclear fusion power. , it was the leading candidate for a practical fusion reactor. Tokamaks were initially conceptualized in the 1950s by Soviet physicists Igor Tamm and Andrei Sakharov, inspired by a letter by Oleg Lavrentiev. The first working tokamak was attributed to the work of Natan Yavlinsky on the T-1 in 1958.
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