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Perturbative Transport Studies in Fusion Plasmas

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Abstract

Studies of transport in fusion plasmas using perturbations of an equilibrium state reviewed. Essential differences between steady-state and perturbative transport studies are pointed out. Important transport issues that can be addressed with perturbative experiments are identified as: (i) Are the transport relations linear (or nearly so)? (ii) What are the dominant dependences on plasma parameters; can they be understood from theory? (iii) Are there significant off-diagonal terms in the transport matrix? If so, how important are these for global confinement? (iv) Do the data obtained with perturbative experiments indicate that tokamak performance can be optimized along lines different from those presently explored? The theoretical framework for perturbative transport experiments is given. It is shown that perturbative experiments yield transport coefficients that are essentially different from the steady-state transport coefficients. In particular, when transport can be described by a transport matrix with off-diagonal elements, a perturbative experiment yields (one or more of) the eigenvalues of the matrix. In contrast, the coefficients obtained by steady-state analysis are linear combinations of the matrix coefficients, with the actual values of the various gradients as multipliers. Hence, the outcome of a steady-state transport evaluation depends on the actual values of the gradients, whereas a perturbative experiment measures the underlying transport matrix. Experimental perturbation techniques and techniques for data analysis are reviewed. Perturbations include the sawtooth instability, oscillatory gasfeed, modulated power input, pellet injection, etc. Data analysis techniques range from the time-to-peak analysis employed in sawtooth pulse propagation through Fourier or Laplace transforms, to direct numerical modelling. A review of the most important sources of systematic error is given. Several research strategies are distinguished: (i) measurement of transport coefficients; (ii) comparison of measured incremental fluxes to theoretical predictions or empirical assessment of the relations between incremental fluxes and changes in plasma fluctuations; and (iii) investigation of the unexpected 'strange' phenomena that are induced by the perturbations. Results are reviewed and discussed, organized by research strategy. Finally, it is investigated whether the questions posed at the start of the abstract can be answered by the existing experimental data base.

Year of Publication
1995
Journal
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
Volume
37
Number
8
Number of Pages
799-852
Date Published
Aug
ISBN Number
0741-3335
DOI
PId
bf3a7aa7257b3a33ecf70a91b0f99ba5
Journal Article
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