Operational limits under different wall conditions on TEXTOR-94

  • J. Rapp
  • , W. Biel
  • , H. Gerhauser
  • , A. Huber
  • , H. R. Koslowski
  • , M. Lehnen
  • , V. Philipps
  • , A. Pospieszczyk
  • , D. Reiser
  • , U. Samm
  • , G. Sergienko
  • , M. Z. Tokar
  • , R. Zagörski

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Generally the operational range of tokamaks is limited by the β and the density limit. Experimentally it was found, that the appearance of MARFEs inhibited an increase of the density significantly above the so-called Greenwald density (nGW). In TEXTOR-94 the onset of MARFEs has been investigated under different wall conditions. With fresh siliconization and fresh boronization the appearance of MARFEs can be postponed to higher densities (NGW = n̄e/nGW = 1.7). At those high densities n̄e = 8×1019 m-3 the Zeff is reduced to 1.3. But as important as the reduction of the global impurity content is the suppressed carbon release on the high-field-side (HFS) just after wall conditioning. Modeling of the MARFE onset by the codes B2-Eirene and TECXY demonstrates that an instability on the HFS due to deuterium recycling and radiation only leads to the formation of MARFEs at higher line-averaged densities in comparison to calculations which include carbon impurities. Complete suppression of MARFEs has been achieved by controlled displacement of the plasma column to the low-field-side (LFS), which reduces the local recycling and impurity release at the inner bumper limiter. This resulted in the highest densities achieved at TEXTOR-94 of NGW = 2.1 independent of wall conditions. In this case the maximum achievable density is limited by a radiative collapse.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1148-1154
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of Nuclear Materials
Volume290-293
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2001
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Operational limits under different wall conditions on TEXTOR-94'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this