45th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics

October 27-31, 2003
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Meeting ID: DPP03

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A Little Chaos May Go a Long Way in Future Fusion Energy Reactors

Oct. 30, 2003
Thursday morning
Poster Session QP
ACC, Fran Hill Southeast Exhibit Hall

Application of ergodic magnetic field suppresses ELMs.
Application of ergodic magnetic field suppresses ELMs.

In work that makes practical, large-scale fusion energy production increasingly feasible, plasma physicists working at DOE's DIII-D National Fusion Facility in San Diego are using a little chaos to prevent precious energy from escaping fusion energy devices.

In a magnetic fusion device, or tokamak, one of the most crucial regions for reducing the loss of heat and particles is at the plasma region's edge. Particle crossing this edge leave the plasma, and carry energy with them, degrading the fusion reactor's walls, and making it harder for the desired fusion energy production to occur. This problem will only increase for next-generation fusion energy machines such as the proposed ITER facility.

As the energy content of the fusion fuel increases, plasma in the edges has a tendency to become unstable, exhibiting a kind of turbulence that physicists call "Edge Localized Modes", commonly referred to as ELMs. In experiments presented this week, an international team of researchers applied chaotic magnetic fields, in which the field lines point in unpredictable directions, to a small edge region of the plasma in the DIII-D experiment. With the chaotic magnetic field they applied, the researchers significantly reduced the ELM instabilities in the DIII-D plasma, enabling more heat to stay trapped in the fusion fuel and preserving the favorable conditions that allow fusion energy production to occur. Assuming that this approach can be extended to next-step fusion energy devices, it holds the promise of increasing the lives of materials that make up fusion-energy device walls without degrading the performance of the plasma fuel.

Contacts
T. E. Evans, General Atomics, 505-842-1234, evans@fusion.gat.com
T. S. Taylor, General Atomics, taylor@fusion.gat.com
Paul Thomas, CEA, France, paul.richard.thomas@gat.com

Further information:
Extended summary of work and images: PDF version (624k)

[QP1.037] Stochastic Boundary Effects on the DIII-D Pedestal Region
Abstract: http://www.aps.org/meet/DPP03/baps/abs/S1880037.html

[QP1.038] Effect of Resonant Magnetic Perturbations on QH-Mode Plasmas
Abstract: http://www.aps.org/meet/DPP03/baps/abs/S1880038.html

Reporters seeking additional information should contact David Harris, 301-209-3238, harris@aps.org or Ben Stein, 301-209-3091, bstein@aip.org.