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The effect of pressure anisotropy on 3-D MHD stability for low magnetic field LHD equilibria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2023

T.E. Moen*
Affiliation:
Eindhoven University of Technology, P.O. Box 513, 5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Y. Suzuki
Affiliation:
Graduate School of Advanced Science and Engineering, Hiroshima University, 1-4-1 Kagamiyama, Higashihiroshima 739-8527, Japan
J.H.E. Proll
Affiliation:
Eindhoven University of Technology, P.O. Box 513, 5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands
*
Email address for correspondence: t.e.moen@student.tue.nl
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Abstract

The magnetohydrodynamic stability of plasmas with an anisotropic pressure component is analysed for a low magnetic field configuration of the large helical device. Magnetic equilibria are calculated by the anisotropic Neumann inverse moments equilibrium code, an extension of the three-dimensional variational moments equilibrium code. A modified version of the bi-Maxwellian is used to model the anisotropic particle velocity distribution. Magnetohydrodynamic stability calculations for the $n=1$ mode family are carried out by TERPSICHORE, which has been expanded by the Kruskal–Oberman energy principle. For on-axis particle deposition, the growth rate and plasma displacement show that the parallel dominant plasmas are significantly more stable than isotropic or perpendicular dominant plasmas. For off-axis particle deposition, the growth rate and the Mercier criterion in the peripheral region $\rho =0.9$, show that low field (LF) deposition perpendicular dominant plasmas are most unstable. For the most realistic off-axis deposition profile, it is found that parallel dominant plasmas are most stable for LF deposition, while perpendicular dominant plasmas are most stable for high field deposition. We conclude that, under low magnetic field conditions in the large helical device, tangential neutral beam injection heating has a stabilising influence on the plasma.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Table 1. The hot-particle pressure profiles for which MHD stability analysis has been performed, along with the values for $B_C$ chosen for simulation and the corresponding heating scheme.

Figure 1

Figure 1. The normalised hot-particle pressure profiles $p_{{h}}$ described in table 1, as a function of the flux surface coordinate $s$.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Hot-particle parallel pressure distribution for the realistic hot-pressure profile with $B_C=2.3$T and $\langle \beta \rangle \approx 3\,\%$ in a vertically elongated cross-section. The black curves indicate flux surfaces.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Hot-particle perpendicular pressure distribution for the realistic hot-pressure profile with $B_C=2.3$T and $\langle \beta \rangle \approx 3\,\%$ in a vertically elongated cross-section. The black curves indicate flux surfaces.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Rotational transform $\iota (s)$ for a vacuum simulation and for the parabolic and realistic hot-pressure profiles at pressure isotropy. For the latter two profiles, $\langle \beta \rangle \approx 2.5\,\%$ and $\langle \beta \rangle \approx 3\,\%$, respectively.

Figure 5

Figure 5. The normalised plasma displacement sum over all modes as a function of the flux surface coordinate $s$, $\varXi (s)/\varXi _{\max }$, for the parabolic, peaked and broad hot-particle pressure profiles. For each profile, three levels of anisotropy were considered. The $\langle \beta \rangle$ values for the parabolic, peaked and broad profiles are approximately equal to $2.5\,\%$, $1.5\,\%$ and $3\,\%$, respectively.

Figure 6

Figure 6. The five most dominant modes in line with ordering in (5.3) of the displacement vector and the $\iota$ profile for a parabolic hot-pressure profile. This figure shows a pressure isotropic simulation with $\langle \beta \rangle \approx 2.5\,\%$. The red dotted lines indicate the location of the $\iota (s)=0.5$ surface.

Figure 7

Figure 7. The growth rates corresponding to the parabolic, peaked and broad hot-particle pressure profiles. For each profile, three levels of anisotropy were considered. The $\langle \beta \rangle$ values for the parabolic, peaked and broad profiles are approximately equal to $2.5\,\%$, $1.5\,\%$ and $3\,\%$, respectively. The value for $\langle \beta _{\perp / \|} \rangle$ represents the average value over all simulations in the $\langle \beta \rangle$-scan with the same ratio $T_\perp / T_{\|}$.

Figure 8

Figure 8. The Mercier criteria corresponding to the parabolic, peaked and broad hot-particle pressure profiles. For each profile, three levels of anisotropy were considered. The $\langle \beta \rangle$ values for the parabolic, peaked and broad profiles are approximately equal to $2.5\,\%$, $1.5\,\%$ and $3\,\%$, respectively. The value for $\langle \beta _{\perp / \|} \rangle$ represents the average value over all simulations in the $\langle \beta \rangle$-scan with the same ratio $T_\perp / T_{\|}$. The black lines indicate the stability boundary where the Mercier criterion is zero.

Figure 9

Figure 9. The function $\varXi (s)/\varXi _{\max }$ for the hollow and realistic hot-particle pressure profiles. For each profile, three levels of anisotropy were considered. For both pressure profiles, $\langle \beta \rangle \approx 3\,\%$.

Figure 10

Figure 10. The growth rates corresponding to the hollow and realistic hot-particle pressure profiles. For each profile, three levels of anisotropy were considered. For both pressure profiles, $\langle \beta \rangle \approx 3\,\%$. The value for $\langle \beta _{\perp / \|} \rangle$ represents the average value over all simulations in the $\langle \beta \rangle$-scan with the same ratio $T_\perp / T_{\|}$.

Figure 11

Figure 11. The Mercier criteria corresponding to the hollow and realistic hot-particle pressure profiles. For each profile, three levels of anisotropy were considered. For both pressure profiles, $\langle \beta \rangle \approx 3\,\%$. The value for $\langle \beta _{\perp / \|} \rangle$ represents the average value over all simulations in the $\langle \beta \rangle$-scan with the same ratio $T_\perp / T_{\|}$. The black lines indicate the stability boundary where the Mercier criterion is zero.