Accession Number DE2012-1037993
Title Simulation Of Microtearing Turbulence In NSTX.
Publication Date Feb 2012
Media Count 30p
Personal Author E. Wanag J. Candy J. Zhang N. A. Crocker R. E. Bell S. M. Kaye W. Guttenfelder W. M. Nevins
Abstract Thermal energy confinement times in NSTX dimensionless parameter scans increase with decreasing collisionality. While ion thermal transport is neoclassical, the source of anomalous electron thermal transport in these discharges remains unclear, leading to considerable uncertainty when extrapolating to future ST devices at much lower collisionality. Linear gyrokinetic simulations find microtearing modes to be unstable in high collisionality discharges. First non-linear gyrokinetic simulations of microtearing turbulence in NSTX show they can yield experimental levels of transport. Magnetic flutter is responsible for almost all the transport ((approx)98%), perturbed field line trajectories are globally stochastic, and a test particle stochastic transport model agrees to within 25% of the simulated transport. Most significantly, microtearing transport is predicted to increase with electron collisionality, consistent with the observed NSTX confinement scaling. While this suggests microtearing modes may be the source of electron thermal transport, the predictions are also very sensitive to electron temperature gradient, indicating the scaling of the instability threshold is important. In addition, microtearing turbulence is susceptible to suppression via sheared E-B flows as experimental values of E-B shear (comparable to the linear growth rates) dramatically reduce the transport below experimental values. Refinements in numerical resolution and physics model assumptions are expected to minimize the apparent discrepancy. In cases where the predicted transport is strong, calculations suggest that a proposed polarimetry diagnostic may be sensitive to the magnetic perturbations associated with the unique structure of microtearing turbulence.
Keywords Confinement
Electron temperature
Microtearing instability
NSTX
Polarimetry
Shear
Test particles
Tokamaks
Trajectories
Turbulence


 
Source Agency Technical Information Center Oak Ridge Tennessee
NTIS Subject Category 77A - Thermonuclear Fusion Devices
Corporate Author Princeton Univ., NJ. Plasma Physics Lab.
Document Type Technical report
Title Note N/A
NTIS Issue Number 1221
Contract Number DE-ACO2-09CH11466

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