DIFFER
DIFFER Publication

Taming Harmful Bursts and Heat Flux in High-Confinement Tokamak Plasmas

Label Value
Author
Abstract

A major challenge in tokamak fusion research is first-wall erosion caused by steady heat loads and sudden energy bursts known as edge-localized modes. Divertor detachment reduces steady-state heat flux, while resonant magnetic perturbations can suppress these instabilities. However, integrating the two has been difficult because they require conflicting operating conditions. Here we demonstrate simultaneous achievement of resonant magnetic perturbations mitigated small edge-localized modes and impurity seeded partial divertor detachment in plasmas with an ITER-similar shape on the DIII-D tokamak. Experiments and simulations show that resonant magnetic perturbations facilitate detachment by redistributing particles, lowering the core density and increasing the scrape-off layer density, thereby reducing the amount of injected gas required. Cooling-gas injection eliminates the secondary heat-flux peak created by three-dimensional magnetic lobes, while edge cooling weakens the plasma response to the applied magnetic fields. These advances illustrate a viable pathway for integrating edge stability control with power exhaust in future fusion reactors.

Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Nature Communications
Volume
16
Number of Pages
in press
DOI
Dataset
PId
59825652dcb4255f7ad76de56b45a6e0
Alternate Journal
Nat. Commun.
Label
OA
Journal Article
Download citation
Citation
Hu, Q., Wang, H., Navarro Gonzalez, M., Wang, H., Eldon, D., Ma, X. X., … Yang, S. M. (2025). Taming Harmful Bursts and Heat Flux in High-Confinement Tokamak Plasmas. Nature Communications, 16, in press. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-67080-1