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"Gates, David A."
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Observation of a reduced-turbulence regime with boron powder injection in a stellarator
by
Lunsford, R.
,
Kawamura, G.
,
Morisaki, T.
in
639/4077/4091/4093
,
639/766/1960/1136
,
70 PLASMA PHYSICS AND FUSION TECHNOLOGY
2022
In state-of-the-art stellarators, turbulence is a major cause of the degradation of plasma confinement. To maximize confinement, which eventually determines the amount of nuclear fusion reactions, turbulent transport needs to be reduced. Here we report the observation of a confinement regime in a stellarator plasma that is characterized by increased confinement and reduced turbulent fluctuations. The transition to this regime is driven by the injection of submillimetric boron powder grains into the plasma. With the line-averaged electron density being kept constant, we observe a substantial increase of stored energy and electron and ion temperatures. At the same time, the amplitude of the plasma turbulent fluctuations is halved. While lower frequency fluctuations are damped, higher frequency modes in the range between 100 and 200 kHz are excited. We have observed this regime for different heating schemes, namely with both electron and ion cyclotron resonant radio frequencies and neutral beams, for both directions of the magnetic field and both hydrogen and deuterium plasmas.
In stellarators, turbulence is detrimental for the confinement of the plasma. In the Large Helical Device, a confinement regime with reduced turbulence and improved confinement is observed.
Journal Article
Stellarator Research Opportunities: A Report of the National Stellarator Coordinating Committee
by
Volpe, F.
,
Allain, J. P.
,
Mynick, H.
in
70 PLASMA PHYSICS AND FUSION TECHNOLOGY
,
Design optimization
,
Documents
2018
This document is the product of a stellarator community workshop, organized by the National Stellarator Coordinating Committee and referred to as Stellcon, that was held in Cambridge, Massachusetts in February 2016, hosted by MIT. The workshop was widely advertised, and was attended by 40 scientists from 12 different institutions including national labs, universities and private industry, as well as a representative from the Department of Energy. The final section of this document describes areas of community wide consensus that were developed as a result of the discussions held at that workshop. Areas where further study would be helpful to generate a consensus path forward for the US stellarator program are also discussed. The program outlined in this document is directly responsive to many of the strategic priorities of FES as articulated in “Fusion Energy Sciences: A Ten-Year Perspective (2015–2025)” [
1
]. The natural disruption immunity of the stellarator directly addresses “Elimination of transient events that can be deleterious to toroidal fusion plasma confinement devices” an area of critical importance for the US fusion energy sciences enterprise over the next decade. Another critical area of research “Strengthening our partnerships with international research facilities,” is being significantly advanced on the W7-X stellarator in Germany and serves as a test-bed for development of successful international collaboration on ITER. This report also outlines how materials science as it relates to plasma and fusion sciences, another critical research area, can be carried out effectively in a stellarator. Additionally, significant advances along two of the Research Directions outlined in the report; “Burning Plasma Science: Foundations—Next-generation research capabilities”, and “Burning Plasma Science: Long pulse—Sustainment of Long-Pulse Plasma Equilibria” are proposed.
Journal Article
Identification of important error fields in stellarators using Hessian matrix method
2019
Error fields are predominantly attributed to inevitable coil imperfections. Controlling error fields during coil fabrication and assembly is crucial for stellarators. Excessively tight coil tolerance increases time and cost, and, in part, led to the cancellation of NCSX and delay of W7-X. In this paper, we improve the recently proposed Hessian matrix method to rapidly identify important coil deviations. Two of the most common figures of merit, magnetic island size and quasi-symmetry, are analytically differentiated over coil parameters. By extracting the eigenvectors of the Hessian matrix, we can directly identify sensitive coil deviations in the order of the eigenvalues. The new method is applied to the upcoming CFQS configuration. Important perturbations that enlarge n/m=4/11 islands and deteriorate quasi-axisymmetry of the magnetic field are successfully determined. The results suggest each modular coil should have separate tolerance and some certain perturbation combinations will produce significant error fields. By relaxing unnecessary coil tolerance, this method will hopefully lead to a substantial reduction in time and cost.
Distilled Spirits in Bonded Warehouse
1917
Section 4, act of May 28, 1880, provides:
Journal Article
Cases for Bottled-in-Bond Spirits
1917
The following letter of even date, addressed to the -- Distilling Company on the above-mentioned subject, is published for your information:
Journal Article
Denatured Alcohol
1917
SIR: Referring further to your letter of the 10th ultimo, submitting the following proposed formula as a special denaturant for alcohol, to be used exclusively in the preparation of soap liniment, chloroform liniment, and liquid and green soap, in accordance with the specifications and regulations set forth in the United States Pharmacop ia; Alcohol...
Journal Article
Humphrey Amendment Violations
1917
REPORTS now being received covering shipments into \"dry\" territory indicate that there is some misunderstanding relative to the duties of internal-revenue officers with respect to shipments in violation of section 240 of the Criminal Code.
Journal Article