experiments and modeling on active rwm rotation in rfp plasmas

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S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 1 Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas S.C. Guo , M. Baruzzo, T. Bolzonella, V. Igochine (*) , G. Marchiori, A. Soppelsa, D. Yadikin (*) , H. Zohm (*) Consorzio RFX, Associazione Euratom-ENEA sulla fusione, Padova, Italy (*) Max-Planck Institut fur Plasmaphysik, EURATOM Association, Garching, Germany

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Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas S.C. Guo , M. Baruzzo, T. Bolzonella, V. Igochine (*) , G. Marchiori, A. Soppelsa, D. Yadikin (*) , H. Zohm (*) Consorzio RFX, Associazione Euratom-ENEA sulla fusione, Padova, Italy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 1

Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo, M. Baruzzo, T. Bolzonella, V. Igochine(*), G. Marchiori, A. Soppelsa, D. Yadikin(*), H. Zohm(*)

Consorzio RFX, Associazione Euratom-ENEA sulla fusione, Padova, Italy(*) Max-Planck Institut fur Plasmaphysik, EURATOM Association, Garching, Germany

Page 2: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 2

Outline

Introduction

RWM active rotation: experimental issues

RWM active rotation: first results

RWM active rotation modelling

Conclusions and future work

Page 3: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 3

Introduction

• Resistive Wall Modes (RWMs) are MHD instabilities common to many toroidal devices

growing on timescales that depend on the typical penetration time of the surrounding

passive boundary.

• In both tokamaks and RFPs they can be viewed as serious performance limiting

phenomena and for this reason studies on their very nature and, ultimately, on their

control are very important.

• In the tokamak case the stabilizing role played by plasma rotation is one of the most

important open issues for present and future devices.

• In the RFP case, numerical modelling suggested that only fluid rotation much faster

than the ones normally observed in present RFP experiments can provide a similar role,

but, also due to the lack of strong momentum input sources, experimental data are

missing.

• The new sets of experiments done on RFX-mod, and recently replicated on T2R, aim at

providing inputs on both fundamental RWM physics and new possible control strategies.

Page 4: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 4

RWM in RFPs: stabilization by rotation

S.C. Guo, J. P. Freidberg and R. Nachtrieb,”Stability of resistive wall modes in reversed field pinches with longitudinal flow and dissipative effects”, PoP (1999)

• In the RFP configuration plasma velocities needed for RWM stabilization are very high. The required flow velocities have to reach kVo ≈ k//VA ≈ A.

• Active feedback control is then, when implemented, the only stabilising mechanism for the RFP.

Page 5: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 5

The RFX-mod active control system

Actuators:192 active coils100% coverage of the mechanical structure external surfaceEach saddle coil is fed with its own power supplyInputs (real time):192 independent saddle sensors (Br) + 192 pickup coils (Bt, for variable radius control) + 192 coil currents (for sideband correction) independent control on m=0,1,2 (partial), -23<n<24

Software control:Full PID digital controller. For the present experiments, optimized Clean Mode Control scheme was used (control gains relative to single Fourier modes)

Page 6: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 6

RWM characterisation and control

RWM experimental growth rates can be calculated with a high degree of reliability (e.g. (m=1, n=-5), F=-0.07 in left figure).

Comparison with models can be done during the free growth and the active control phases. In right figure eigenfunction calculations done solving Newcomb equation (P. Zanca)

0.1

1

10

0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 0.3

18623 - n=-5

n-5n-5bis

y = 0.084842 * e^(15.786x) R= 0.9979

n-5

time

0

2

4

6

8

0 0.2 0.4 0.6

n=-6 control (shot 17304)

t=10 mst=30 mst=149 mst=155 mst=200 ms

Mod

e a

mp

(mT

)

r (m)

Shot 17304

n=-3 ÷ -6 control off control on

Page 7: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 7

The idea (feedback rotation control)

Perfect control

Incomplete control

External field

Plasma field

Incomplete controlwith phase shift

Total field≠0

External field

Plasma fieldTotal field=0

External field

Plasma fieldTotal field≠0

Page 8: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 8

Proportional gain scan on n=-6; phase 0; F=-0.08

Effect of a real proportional gain scan on (1,-6) RWM: (a) mode amplitudes,(b) mode phases.

Black full traces Gp=800 (full control), red squares Gp=200, cyan circles Gp=150 , blue diamonds Gp=100.

Note that an extremely good reproducibility of the RWM growth rate can be obtained under controlled experimental conditions.

Control from 130 ms

Page 9: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 9

Phase scan at fixed (normal) Gp: 400 kA

Effect of a complex proportional gain scan on 400 kA discharges: (a) mode amplitudes;(b) mode phases.

Black full traces represent a reference shot where (1,-6) RWM is free to grow up to 0.13s and then is fully controlled.

Red squares and blue diamonds traces show the effect of the application of a complex proportional gains: the rotation of a selected RWM can be induced in both opposite directions (feedbackin action from 0.1s).

The induced rotation does not depend on the chosen direction.

Page 10: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 10

Phase scan at fixed (normal) Gp: 600 kA

The induced rotation work in the same way at different plasma currents.

400 kA experiments

600 kA experiments

Page 11: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 11

Induced rotation data analysis

•Special care: sensor measurements (and Fourier components) during the control are relative to plasma+external fields! The question is then: what is actually rotating?

•From total br measurements to plasma vs external fields

• External br field at the measurement radius obtained from coil currents (including mutual inductances and machine structure). Model developed by G. Marchiori and A. Soppelsa

• Plasma br field by subtraction

• Time evolution of external and plasma harmonics

(amplitude and phase)

Page 12: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 12

Measurement components

Decomposition of the measured mode amplitude and phase into plasma and external field components:

-full black line: total Br (1,-6) as measured by the sensor arrays;

- blue diamonds: reconstructed plasma Br,

- red squares: reconstructed external Br applied by the active control system.

-2

0

2

0 0.1 0.2 0.3

(1,-

6) P

hs [

rad]

Time [s]

(b)

0

1

2

3

(1,-

6) A

mp

[mT

]

(a)

Page 13: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 13

Modeling of induced rotation

•Since the mode rational surface is

outside the plasma, the usual torque

theory is not appropriate to be

applied

• the following simple model is

proposed:

Consider only one (m,n) mode in

cylidrical geometry,

, ,( , , , ) ( ) expm n m nr t r i m n t

m,n satisfies Newcomb’s equation with extended boundary condition at rb (resistive wall b), m,n (∞)=0

Inside plasma:

b,b

r

r

n,mb E

dr

dr

b

b

(without feedback coils)

C. G. Gimblett, Nuclear Fusion (1986)

n,mrn,m rb

Page 14: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 14

Modeling of induced rotation

)r(ˆ)r(ˆ)t,r( ffbbn,m In the

vacuum:

,, ,

b

b

r

m nb b b b f f b b

r

dr E E idr

, 2 2 2, , 0 ,

f

f

r

m nf b b f f f f f

r

dr E E S m n I m ndr

,

ˆ i

i

r

ji j

r

d rE r

dr

, ,i j b f

1)( bob r

r i

S(m,n) -the coefficient related to the structure of the feedback coils

for the feedback circuit:

,,

,

ˆˆ 0

1b f

b b bf f f

E GE i

E i

( )ff b f f

dIL G R Idt

Dispersion relation for

, ,, ,

,

ˆ f b b fb b b b

f f

E EE E

E 2 2 20ˆ

ff

SGG m n

R

f f fL R

(including effects of resistive wall and complex gain)

' 'ˆ ( ) ( ) ( )j m j mr A kr I kr B kr K kr

(G=Gr+iGi)

Page 15: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 15

Modeling of induced rotation

Re(G)=const. ; Im(G)= Re(G)Tang()Parameter in modelling:F=-0.05, =1.47, o=0.23

Without feedback,

0G

b

b,bE

With real gain , 0Gi

,,

,

ˆˆ 0

1b f

b b bf f f

E GE i

E i

1f

f,b

f,fb,brcr E

EEGG

if

≤ 0 for

With complex gain rcr GG and )tan(GG rci

)tan(E

b

b,br

Page 16: Experiments and modeling on active RWM rotation in RFP plasmas

S.C. Guo 13th IEA/RFP Workshop, October 9-11, 2008, Stockholm 16

Conclusions

•It was demonstrated for the first time in RFPs that the internal non-resonant resistive wall mode can be detached from the resistive wall in a controlled way.

• The observed constant rotation of the mode depends on the phase shift between external perturbations and the mode.

• It was experimentally confirmed that plasma rotation, plasma current and coupling to other modes have no impact on the rotation frequency of the RWM in the range explored.

• Similar experiments started on T2R will allow better understanding of the boundary condition influences (both passive conductors and software control)

• The proposed simple analytical model gives good description of the experimental results. This model can be further improved.