Particle transport and fueling in ELM free fusion relevant regimes
2024 Research Campaign, Pedestal and Non/Small ELM Regimes
Purpose of Experiment
Future fusion power plants will need to manage the amount of heat flowing to the walls in order to operate safely. The highest performance operational regime in current devices, “High Confinement Mode,” has the drawback of periodic instabilities which expel large amounts of particles and energy out of the confined region, leading to heat loads on the walls that will not be tolerable for future devices. Several techniques have been developed to suppress these “Edge-Localized Mode” (ELM) instabilities for future reactors. By altering the characteristic particle transport in the edge of the confined region, it is possible to avoid the sharp pressure gradients that play a role in triggering the ELM. One method of doing so is to apply “Resonant Magnetic Perturbations,” (RMPs) to create a ripple in the magnetic field which enhances particle diffusion in the edge region. New diagnostics at DIII-D and advances in analysis methods will allow this experiment to quantify and compare the transport properties of RMP ELM-suppressed discharges, to help assess the viability of the RMP technique for future fusion power plants and predict their performance.