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Analytical and numerical study of the transverse Kelvin–Helmholtz instability in tokamak edge plasmas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 April 2016

J. R. Myra*
Affiliation:
Lodestar Research Corporation, Boulder, CO, USA
D. A. D’Ippolito
Affiliation:
Lodestar Research Corporation, Boulder, CO, USA
D. A. Russell
Affiliation:
Lodestar Research Corporation, Boulder, CO, USA
M. V. Umansky
Affiliation:
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, USA
D. A. Baver
Affiliation:
Lodestar Research Corporation, Boulder, CO, USA
*
Email address for correspondence: jrmyra@lodestar.com
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Abstract

Sheared flows perpendicular to the magnetic field can be driven by the Reynolds stress or ion pressure gradient effects and can potentially influence the stability and turbulent saturation level of edge plasma modes. On the other hand, such flows are subject to the transverse Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) instability. Here, the linear theory of KH instabilities is first addressed with an analytic model in the asymptotic limit of long wavelengths compared with the flow scale length. The analytic model treats sheared $\boldsymbol{E}\times \boldsymbol{B}$ flows, ion diamagnetism (including gyro-viscous terms), density gradients and parallel currents in a slab geometry, enabling a unified summary that encompasses and extends previous results. In particular, while ion diamagnetism, density gradients and parallel currents each individually reduce KH growth rates, the combined effect of density and ion pressure gradients is more complicated and partially counteracting. Secondly, the important role of realistic toroidal geometry is explored numerically using an invariant scaling analysis together with the 2DX eigenvalue code to examine KH modes in both closed and open field line regions. For a typical spherical torus magnetic geometry, it is found that KH modes are more unstable at, and just outside of, the separatrix as a result of the distribution of magnetic shear. Finally implications for reduced edge turbulence modelling codes are discussed.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2016 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Computed growth rate (solid) and real part of the frequency (dashed) for the KH mode using a diffuse radial profile model (Popovich et al.2010) and sample parameters from the LAPD experiment. Figure reproduced from Phys. Plasmas17, 102107,1-11 (2010).

Figure 1

Figure 2. Marginal stability diagram for the dispersion relation of (2.24) with ${\it\tau}_{1}={\it\tau}_{2}\equiv {\it\tau}$. Note that in the presence of a density gradient, the effect of an ion pressure gradient depends on its sign.

Figure 2

Figure 3. (a) Flux surface geometry showing the computational grid at reduced resolution for purposes of illustration; (b) typical KH eigenmode structure of $|{\it\delta}{\it\Phi}|$ showing localization to the outboard midplane and a double peak.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Dependence of the KH growth rate on wavenumber and invariant parameter combinations. See table 1 for the parameters of each case. The dashed curve is the result from the $k_{y}L\ll 1$ analytic theory of § 2.

Figure 4

Table 1. Parameters employed for the cases shown in figure 4.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Dependence of the KH spectrum growth rate on location of the velocity shear layer relative to the separatrix. Negative (positive) shifts indicate cases where the sheared flow layer is located in the closed (open) flux surface region.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Distribution of integrated magnetic shear along a field line. The cases and colour scheme correspond to those of figure 5. The low-field-side region corresponds to ${\rm\pi}<{\it\theta}<2{\rm\pi}$ with the upper X-point at ${\rm\pi}$ and the lower dominant X-point at $2{\rm\pi}$.