Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of triangularity on plasma turbulence and the SOL-width scaling in L-mode diverted tokamak configurations

Kyungtak Lim, M. Giacomin, Paolo Ricci, A.J. Coelho, O. Février, D. Mancini, D. Silvagni, L. Stenger

2023Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The effect of triangularity on tokamak boundary plasma turbulence is investigated using global, flux-driven, three-dimensional, two-fluid simulations. The simulations show that negative triangularity (NT) stabilizes boundary plasma turbulence, and linear investigations reveal that this is due to a reduction of the magnetic curvature driven by interchange instabilities, such as the resistive ballooning mode (RBM). As a consequence, the pressure decay length L p , related to the scrape-off layer (SOL) power fall-off length λ q , is found to be affected by triangularity. Leveraging considerations on the effect of triangularity on the linear growth rate and nonlinear evolution of the RBM, the analytical theory-based scaling law for L p in L-mode plasmas, derived by Giacomin et al (2021 Nucl. Fusion 61 076002), is extended to include the effect of triangularity. The scaling is in agreement with nonlinear simulations and a multi-machine experimental database, which includes recent TCV discharges dedicated to the study of the effect of triangularity in L-mode diverted discharges. Overall, the present results highlight that NT narrows the L p and considering the effect of triangularity is important for a reliable extrapolation of λ q from present experiments to larger devices.

Topics & Concepts

TokamakPhysicsPlasmaTurbulenceDIII-DScalingBallooningResistive touchscreenExtrapolationNonlinear systemMechanicsBETA (programming language)CurvatureComputational physicsNuclear physicsGeometryMathematical analysisQuantum mechanicsEngineeringMathematicsComputer scienceProgramming languageElectrical engineeringMagnetic confinement fusion researchIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism