Litcius/Paper detail

A 1D Lyman-alpha profile camera for plasma edge neutral studies on the DIII-D tokamak

A. Rosenthal, J. W. Hughes, A. Bortolon, F. M. Laggner, T. M. Wilks, R. Vieira, R. Leccacorvi, E. Marmar, A. Nagy, Chris Freeman, D. Mauzey

2021Review of Scientific Instruments33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A one dimensional, absolutely calibrated pinhole camera system was installed on the DIII-D tokamak to measure edge Lyman-alpha (Ly-α) emission from hydrogen isotopes, which can be used to infer neutral density and ionization rate profiles. The system is composed of two cameras, each providing a toroidal fan of 20 lines of sight, viewing the plasma edge on the inboard and outboard side of DIII-D. The cameras' views lie in a horizontal plane 77 cm below the midplane. At its tangency radius, each channel provides a radial resolution of ∼2 cm full width at half maximum (FWHM) with a total coverage of 22 cm. Each camera consists of a rectangular pinhole, Ly-α reflective mirror, narrow-band Ly-α transmission filter, and a 20 channel AXUV photodetector. The combined mirror and transmission filter have a FWHM of 5 nm, centered near the Ly-α wavelength of 121.6 nm and is capable of rejecting significant, parasitic carbon-III (C-III) emission from intrinsic plasma impurities. To provide a high spatial resolution measurement in a compact footprint, the camera utilizes advanced engineering and manufacturing techniques including 3D printing, high stability mirror mounts, and a novel alignment procedure. Absolutely calibrated, spatially resolved Ly-α brightness measurements utilize a bright, isolated line with low parasitic surface reflections and enable quantitative comparison to modeling to study divertor neutral leakage, main chamber fueling, and radial particle transport.

Topics & Concepts

DIII-DPhysicsOpticsDivertorFull width at half maximumPlasma diagnosticsTokamakExtreme ultraviolet lithographyPlasmaPinhole cameraMicrochannel plate detectorDetectorNuclear physicsMagnetic confinement fusion researchFusion materials and technologiesLaser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics
A 1D Lyman-alpha profile camera for plasma edge neutral studies on the DIII-D tokamak | Litcius