(Press-News.org) Contact information: James Riordon
riordon@aps.org
301-209-3238
American Physical Society
Putting a new spin on tokamak disruptions
Rapid plasma rotation may be the key to softening the blow of powerful plasma disruptions
In the quest for fusion energy on earth, researchers use magnetic fields to insulate hot plasma from the walls of the chamber to maintain the reaction and prevent damage to interior surfaces. In the tokamak, a leading contender to achieve a sustained fusion burn, electrical currents flowing in the plasma inside the doughnut-shaped vacuum chamber can become unstable if the plasma current or pressure gets too high or the control system breaks, leading to a sudden termination of the discharge. This sudden termination, called a disruption, can produce concentrated heating and mechanical forces on a section of the interior surface, forcing the plant to shut down for repairs.
Researchers at MIT's Plasma Science and Fusion Center (PSFC), General
Atomics, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, University of Washington, and the University of California, San Diego, believe that if the intense energy of these disruptions could be
uniformly spread out around the interior of the vessel, the plasma could be prevented from melting the wall—a necessity for the next-step fusion device, ITER, under construction in Cadarache, France. Several groundbreaking experiments at the Alcator CMod tokamak at MIT and the DIII-D tokamak in San Diego are guiding the way towards better protection for the vessel walls during disruptions.
Scientists at Alcator C-Mod and DIII-D investigating plasma disruptions have discovered that injecting gases heavier than the background hydrogen fuel (such as argon or neon) just before an impending disruption will spread the resulting energy around the vessel.
However, the Alcator C-Mod team found that the argon or neon does not uniformly spread out quite enough to prevent damage. Sometimes the heat load is still asymmetric, concentrated in one sector of the device. Even using multiple injection sites around the vessel does not necessarily improve the asymmetry, and sometimes heightens it (Olynyk, 2012 APS DPP). To explain this unexpected result, computer models (Izzo, 2012 APS DPP) indicated that internal instabilities within the plasma should determine the radiation asymmetry rather than the distribution of gas injectors.
The DIII-D team has for the first time tested the theory that internal plasma instabilities determine the radiation asymmetry. The team used 3D magnetic fields to "lock" the plasma instability in one direction or another. They found that by varying the direction in which the instability locked, they could reproducibly change the amount of energy deposited at a given location within the vessel, as expected from the computer. Moreover, no indication of the expected localized heating around the gas injector itself was found. The DIII-D results show that simply increasing the number of gas injectors does not alleviate radiation asymmetry during disruption mitigation. The results do, however, suggest that rotating the instability could spread the heat more evenly.
Using rotation to lower the heat load to the walls is exactly what was discovered at the Alcator C-Mod tokamak. The Alcator C-Mod team has discovered that the plasma can spontaneously rotate rapidly during a portion of the disruption known as the "quench." The rotation appears to be driven by smaller-scale instabilities, and the rotation ends up moving the radiating regions around the vessel quickly and thus lowering the average heat load. Future research will determine if we can control or encourage this spontaneous rotation, and thus distribute the heat more uniformly to the wall.
INFORMATION:
Research Contacts:
Robert Granetz, MIT, (617)-253-8634, granetz@mit.edu
N.W. Eidietis, General Atomics, (858)-455-2459, eidietis@fusion.gat.com
N. Commaux, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, (858)-455-2073
V.A Izzo, University of California, San Diego, (858)-455-4144, izzo@fusion.gat.com
Abstracts:
CO4.00009 Effects of Magnetic Shear on Toroidal Rotation in C-Mod Plasmas
with LHCD
Session CO4: C-Mod Tokamak
2:00 PM–5:00 PM, Monday, November 11, 2013
Room: Plaza D
GO4.00002 Overview of DIII-D Disruption Mitigation Experimental Results
Session GO4: DIII-D Tokamak
9:30 AM–12:30 PM, Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Room: Plaza D
Putting a new spin on tokamak disruptions
Rapid plasma rotation may be the key to softening the blow of powerful plasma disruptions
2013-11-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Researcher finds potential new use for old drugs
2013-11-13
Researcher finds potential new use for old drugs
From malaria to cancers and immune-related diseases
PULLMAN, Wash. – A class of drugs used to treat parasitic infections such as malaria may also be useful in treating cancers and immune-related diseases, a new WSU-led ...
Our relationship with food: What drives us to eat and new insights into eating disorders
2013-11-13
Our relationship with food: What drives us to eat and new insights into eating disorders
New treatments for binge eating, how our diet impacts brain function, and the connection between marijuana and obesity
SAN DIEGO — A growing body of evidence shows the impact of ...
Stepparents are not always evil
2013-11-13
Stepparents are not always evil
Parents' strategy to love their children depends on more than blood ties
Contrary to common belief, parents do not generally treat their stepchildren less favourably than their own. Until now, many researchers believed ...
No hot flashes? Then don't count on hormones to improve quality of life
2013-11-13
No hot flashes? Then don't count on hormones to improve quality of life
CLEVELAND, Ohio (November 13, 2013)—Hormones at menopause can help with sleep, memory, and more, but only when a woman also has hot flashes, find researchers ...
Development and clinical approval of biodegradeble magnesium alloy
2013-11-13
Development and clinical approval of biodegradeble magnesium alloy
KIST made magnesium alloy from essential minerals to human body
This biodegradable and bioabsorbable metal decomposes from 6 months to 2 years after being transplanted into ...
Danish researchers predict risk of valvular heart disease
2013-11-13
Danish researchers predict risk of valvular heart disease
Researchers at the University of Copenhagen, Herlev Hospital and Rigshospitalet have identified a clear link between narrowed heart valves and a special lipoprotein in the ...
New look identifies crucial clumping of diabetes-causing proteins
2013-11-12
New look identifies crucial clumping of diabetes-causing proteins
MADISON — People get type 2 diabetes. So do cats. But rats don't, and neither do dogs.
Subtle differences in the shape of proteins protect some and endanger others.
"All mammals make ...
First dual-protection intravaginal ring design shows promise in long-term HIV and pregnancy prevention
2013-11-12
First dual-protection intravaginal ring design shows promise in long-term HIV and pregnancy prevention
Research to advance to phase 1 of clinical trials in early 2014
Arlington, Va. — A new intravaginal ring (IVR) has been developed for the sustained ...
Successful grant applications and scholarly impact in neurosurgery
2013-11-12
Successful grant applications and scholarly impact in neurosurgery
Charlottesville, VA (November 12, 2013). Researchers have found a strong relationship between scholarly impact and success in receiving awards from the National Institutes ...
Study finds aerobic exercise improves memory, brain function and physical fitness
2013-11-12
Study finds aerobic exercise improves memory, brain function and physical fitness
New brain imaging techniques allowed researchers to detect brain changes earlier
A new study conducted by researchers at the Center for BrainHealth at The University of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Researchers demonstrate a new material to reduce power consumption of electronics
New chemical tool may improve development of key drug components
IEEE study achieves efficient integration of quantum dot lasers on silicon chiplets
Researchers discover that sound stress alone can prolong and intensify pain
Less pain, more gain: A new recipe for safer, stronger mRNA vaccines
Surprising finding could pave way for universal cancer vaccine
Gene essential for vitamin D absorption could help unlock treatments for cancer and autoimmune diseases
Don’t feed the animals: Researchers warn of risks tied to wildlife interactions
New layered compound promotes two-dimensional magnetism researches and room-temperature magnetic applications
From passive to intelligent: Bioengineered organs meet electronics
Cassava witches’ broom disease takes flight in South America
Recycled tyre tech boosts railway resilience and cuts waste
From kelp to whales: marine heatwaves are reshaping ocean life
Short-term digital mental health interventions reduces depression and anxiety in Ukrainian children and adolescents displaced by war
Guselkumab demonstrates superior efficacy in landmark clinical trials and offers new hope to Crohn’s disease patients
Here’s how the U.S. military can trim its massive carbon footprint
What is chronic venous insufficiency?
Gene editing offers transformative solution to saving endangered species
Scar tissue in athletes’ hearts tied to higher risk of dangerous cardiac rhythms
Cracking the code of force-driven chemistry
What ever-growing incisors can teach us about genetic disease
UCalgary led research helps kids with acute gastroenteritis recover at home
“Sisters together’: Antiracist activism and the fight for trans inclusion at the Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival
A new pathway helps clean up toxic chemicals from plant cells
WPI researchers develop cleaner, scalable process to recycle lithium-ion batteries
NASA to launch SNIFS, Sun’s next trailblazing spectator
Programmable DNA moiré superlattices: expanding the material design space at the nanoscale
Polymer coating extends half life of MXene-based air quality sensor by 200% and enables regeneration
UTIA’s Robert Burns receives Gold Medal Honor from ASABE
Weight loss drugs like Ozempic may help prevent stroke and reduce brain injury-related complications, studies show
[Press-News.org] Putting a new spin on tokamak disruptionsRapid plasma rotation may be the key to softening the blow of powerful plasma disruptions