MHD phenomena in a neutral beam heated high beta, low qadisruption
- 1 March 1988
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Nuclear Fusion
- Vol. 28 (3) , 399-409
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0029-5515/28/3/005
Abstract
A neutral beam heated, β maximizing discharge at low qa in Doublet III ending in disruption is studied and correlated with theoretical models. This discharge achieved MHD β-values close to the theoretical Troyon-Sykes-Wesson limit in its evolution. The MHD phenomena of this discharge are analysed. The sequence of events leading to the high β disruptions is hypothesized as follows: the current and pressure profiles are broad-ened continuously by neutral beam injection. A last sawtooth internal disruption initiates an (m/n = 2/1) island through current profile steepening around the q = 2 surface. The loss of plasma through stochastic field lines slows the island rotation and enhances its interaction with the limiter. The resultant enhanced island growth through island cooling or profile change enlarged the edge stochastic region. The overlapping of the edge stochastic region with the sawtooth mixing region precipitated the pressure disruption. Thus, in our hypothetical model for this discharge, β increase by neutral beam heating does not directly cause the disruption but ushers the plasma indirectly towards it through the profile broadening process and contributes to the destabilization of the 1/1 and 2/1 tearing modes.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Beta limit and localized ballooning mode stability in Doublet IIINuclear Fusion, 1987
- Reconstruction of current profile parameters and plasma shapes in tokamaksNuclear Fusion, 1985
- Tokamak beta limitNuclear Fusion, 1985
- MHD-Limits to Plasma ConfinementPlasma Physics and Controlled Fusion, 1984
- MHD beta limits: scaling laws and comparison with Doublet III dataNuclear Fusion, 1983
- Theory of mode-induced beam particle loss in tokamaksPhysics of Fluids, 1983
- Finite β effects on the nonlinear evolution of the (m = 1; n = 1) mode in tokamaksPhysics of Fluids, 1982
- The second region of stability against ballooning modesNuclear Fusion, 1981
- Nonlinear coupling of tearing modes with self-consistent resistivity evolution in tokamaksPhysics of Fluids, 1980
- Simulation of Large Magnetic Islands: A Possible Mechanism for a Major Tokamak DisruptionPhysical Review Letters, 1977