Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1567489 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2009 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Some key topics in tokamak edge plasma transport and turbulence are reviewed. Multi-device results reveal a new paradigm of scrape-off layer (SOL) transport. Radial transport is driven by intermittency throughout the SOL, in between edge localized modes (ELMs) in H-mode, and comprised of plasma filaments that are generated near the last closed flux surface likely by interchange instability. The filaments travel radially at speeds of ∼1 km/s into the SOL and have a poloidal size of 1–3 cm in most devices. The radial transport in the SOL is poloidally asymmetric, by factors of 2–5, causing a pressure peak in the low field side. This asymmetry and other neo-classical terms, such as Pfirsch–Schlüter currents, are found to drive strong SOL flows. The intermittent particle flux, is 20% of the total, including ELMs, at low collisionality, becoming 70% of total at high collisionality. Numerical and analytical models can reproduce the scaling of intermittency with collisionality as well as many details of the filament dynamics in the SOL.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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