Steady as she goes: Scientists tame damaging plasma
instabilities and pave the way for efficient fusion on Earth
By John Greewald
Princeton , NJ , August 21, 2018 -- Before
scientists can capture and recreate the fusion process that powers the sun and
stars to produce virtually limitless energy on Earth, they must first learn to
control the hot plasma gas that fuels fusion reactions. In a set of recent
experiments, scientists have tamed a plasma instability in a way that could lead
to the efficient and steady state operation of ITER, the international
experiment under construction in France to demonstrate the
feasibility of fusion power. Such continuous operation will be essential for
future fusion devices.
By John Greewald
Fusion powers the sun and stars by fusing light elements in the form of
plasma — the hot, charged state of matter composed of free electrons and atomic
nuclei — to produce massive amounts of energy. Scientists are seeking to
replicate fusion on Earth for a virtually inexhaustible supply of
electricity-generating power.
The most recent findings, developed by a team of researchers led by
physicist Raffi Nazikian of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton
Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) and Craig Petty of General Atomics, stem from
experiments conducted on the DIII-D National Fusion Facility operated by
General Atomics for the DOE in San Diego. The results build on earlier work led
by DIII-D scientists that demonstrated the conditions needed for steady-state
operation of the core of ITER plasmas and established techniques to control
these plasma instabilities.
The new research targets instabilities called Edge Localized Modes (ELMs)
that develop at the periphery of fusion plasmas. Such instabilities can cause
periodic heat bursts that can damage plasma-facing components in a tokamak. “In
these results we observe the suppression of large ELMs, leaving small benign
ELMs in plasmas that overlap with the conditions required for steady-state ITER
operation,” said Nazikian, lead author of a scientific paper in IAEA’s Nuclear
Fusion journal that lays out the findings. “These new experiments are a great
example of successfully combining two separate advances, in this case 100
percent current drive in the plasma core and large ELM suppression in the edge,
in an efficient and effective manner” said Petty, lead author of a prior
Nuclear Fusion paper on the DIII-D findings relevant to the steady state core
of the ITER plasma.
To keep large ELMs from occurring, researchers produce small magnetic
ripples known as resonant magnetic perturbations (RMPs) that distort the smooth
doughnut shape of tokamak plasmas. In the recent experiments, the scientists
found that increasing the overall pressure of the plasma makes the plasma far
more responsive to the ripples to better control ELMs and produce the
conditions needed for steady-state ITER operation.
The higher pressure also increases a self-generated current that forms
inside tokamak plasmas. This can be combined with particle beams and microwaves
to drive and sustain the plasma current indefinitely in a so-called steady
state. These higher self-generated currents make this process more efficient,
and thus a fusion power plant more attractive.
When researchers projected the recent DIII-D results to ITER, they found
that the higher plasma pressure and bootstrap current, together with additional
sources of current from particle beams and microwaves, could create a fully
sustainable steady-state regime that generates four-to-five times more power
than it will take to heat the plasma and drive the current. Support for this
work comes from the DOE Office of Science (FES) and the General Atomics
Postdoctoral Research Participation Program administered by Oak Ridge
Associated Universities (ORAU).
Going forward, physicists seek to create a greater percentage of bootstrap
current to increase the fusion power gain and reduce the additional power
needed to drive current. These DIII-D experiments produced about 30 percent
self-driven current, although the bootstrap current fraction are projected to
increase in ITER as its higher field means its ions collide less often,
enabling current to be driven more easily.
“What we are currently working on in DIII-D is to develop the basis for
fully steady-state high pressure plasma for ITER and beyond,” Nazikian said. “A
central goal of the DIII-D program now is to identify ways in which
high-pressure plasmas can drive most of the current required for steady-state
reactors. We are undertaking major upgrades to the facility to meet this goal
while exploring regimes that are free of dangerous ELMs.”
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