The interpretation of plasma edge conditions in tokamaks
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
- Vol. 27 (12A) , 1411-1425
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0741-3335/27/12a/008
Abstract
The modelling used in the boundary layer depends on a number of factors including whether energy loss is dominated by convection through the sheath, by conduction, or by radiation from impurities. A number of criteria are derived for assessing these factors and are then compared with the experimental data from a range of tokamaks. The comparison is limited to tokamaks operating with limiters, although the criteria also apply to tokamaks with divertors. In most tokamaks, under normal operating conditions, the dominant impurity process is sputtering. Impurities from the wall and limiter enter as neutral atoms and undergo ionization at radial positions which depend on the boundary plasma density and temperature profiles. When impurity densities are sufficiently high they can reduce the edge temperature by increasing the radiation level resulting in a feedback effect on impurity production. The impurity source profiles and impurity transport in the boundary are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Properties of the TEXTOR boundary layerJournal of Nuclear Materials, 1984
- Survey of atomic processes in edge plasmasJournal of Nuclear Materials, 1984
- The behaviour of impurities out of coronal equilibriumPlasma Physics, 1983
- Transport in tokamaks – a review of experimentNuclear Fusion, 1983
- Divertor efficiency in ASDEXJournal of Nuclear Materials, 1982
- Results from Langmuir probe measurements in PDX and PLTJournal of Vacuum Science and Technology, 1982
- A review of the experimental evidence for arcing and sputtering in tokamaksJournal of Nuclear Materials, 1980
- An analytical formula and important parameters for low-energy ion sputteringJournal of Applied Physics, 1980
- Plasma-surface interactions in tokamaksNuclear Fusion, 1979
- Particle and energy fluxes observed in the scrape-off layer of JFT-2 tokamakNuclear Fusion, 1978