Study of particle behaviour at the edge in HT-7 tokamak
Xu Wei (徐伟)ab, Wan Bao-Nian (万宝年)a, Zhou Qian (周倩)a, Wu Zhen-Wei (吴振伟)a, Mao Jiao-Shan (毛剑珊)a, Li Jian-Gang (李建刚)a
a Institute of Plasma Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hefei 230031, China; b Department of Physics, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510405, China
Abstract The cross-field diffusion coefficient (D⊥) at the edge in the HT-7 tokamak is close to the Bohm value when the line average electron density ranges from $1.5\times10^{19}$ to $3.0\times10^{19}$m$^{-3}$. The energy profile of the particles is derived directly from the $H_{\alpha}(D_{\alpha}$) line shape; the dissociative excitation of molecules is dominating when the local electron temperature is above 10eV. By means of the Monte Carlo method the $D_{\alpha}$ line shape is also simulated. We find that the molecular dissociation contributes to 57% of neutral atoms and 53% of emission intensity in front of the limiter, and 85% of neutral atoms and 82% of emission intensity in front of the wall. The influence of atomic and molecular processes on the energy balance is discussed for the scrape-off layer (SOL), and the power loss from molecular dissociation is found to be $6\times10^4$kW at the SOL. The ion Bernstein wave (IBW) can effectively suppress the magnetohydrodynamic behaviour, the fluctuation levels and the turbulence; the D⊥ in front of the limiter declines from 0.84 to 0.2m$^2$$\cdot$s$^{-1}$ and the particle confinement time rises from 9 to 12ms.
Received: 24 August 2003
Revised: 26 April 2004
Accepted manuscript online:
Fund: Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos 19775013 and 10275014).
Cite this article:
Xu Wei (徐伟), Wan Bao-Nian (万宝年), Zhou Qian (周倩), Wu Zhen-Wei (吴振伟), Mao Jiao-Shan (毛剑珊), Li Jian-Gang (李建刚) Study of particle behaviour at the edge in HT-7 tokamak 2004 Chinese Physics 13 1510
Altmetric calculates a score based on the online attention an article receives. Each coloured thread in the circle represents a different type of online attention. The number in the centre is the Altmetric score. Social media and mainstream news media are the main sources that calculate the score. Reference managers such as Mendeley are also tracked but do not contribute to the score. Older articles often score higher because they have had more time to get noticed. To account for this, Altmetric has included the context data for other articles of a similar age.