Resistive Wall Mode Stability and Control in the Reversed Field Pinch

Control of MHD instabilities using a conducting wall together with external magnetic fields is an important route to improved performance and reliability in fusion devices. Active control of MHD modes is of interest for both the Advanced Tokamak and the Reversed Field Pinch (RFP) configurations. A w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yadikin, Dmitriy
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: KTH, Alfvénlaboratoriet 2006
Subjects:
RWM
RFP
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-3867
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-7178-285-0
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-38672013-01-08T13:06:40ZResistive Wall Mode Stability and Control in the Reversed Field PinchengYadikin, DmitriyKTH, AlfvénlaboratorietStockholm : KTH2006Resistive wall modesRWMactive controlfeedbackMHD modesReversed-Field pinchRFPintelligent shellmode controlElectrophysicsElektrofysikControl of MHD instabilities using a conducting wall together with external magnetic fields is an important route to improved performance and reliability in fusion devices. Active control of MHD modes is of interest for both the Advanced Tokamak and the Reversed Field Pinch (RFP) configurations. A wide range of unstable, current driven MHD modes is present in the RFP. An ideally conducting wall facing the plasma can in principle provide stabilization to these modes. However, a real, resistive wall characterized by a wall field diffusion time, cannot stabilize the ideal MHD modes unless they rotate with Alfvénic velocity, which is usually not the case. With a resistive wall, the ideal modes are converted into resistive wall modes (RWM) with growth rates comparable to the inverse wall time. Resistive wall modes have been studied in the EXTRAP T2R thin shell RFP device. Growth rates have been measured and found in agreement with linear MHD stability calculations. An advanced system for active control has been developed and installed on the EXTRAP T2R device. The system includes an array of 128 active saddle coils, fully covering the torus surface. Experiments on EXTRAP T2R have for the first time demonstrated simultaneous active suppression of multiple independent RWMs. In experiments with a partial array, coupling of different modes due to the limited number of feedback coils has been observed, in agreement with theory. Different feedback strategies, such as the intelligent shell, the rotating shell, and mode control have been studied. Further, feedback operation with different types of magnetic field sensors, measuring either the radial or the toroidal field components have been compared QC 20100929Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-3867urn:isbn:91-7178-285-0Trita-EE, 1653-5146 ; 2006:005application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Resistive wall modes
RWM
active control
feedback
MHD modes
Reversed-Field pinch
RFP
intelligent shell
mode control
Electrophysics
Elektrofysik
spellingShingle Resistive wall modes
RWM
active control
feedback
MHD modes
Reversed-Field pinch
RFP
intelligent shell
mode control
Electrophysics
Elektrofysik
Yadikin, Dmitriy
Resistive Wall Mode Stability and Control in the Reversed Field Pinch
description Control of MHD instabilities using a conducting wall together with external magnetic fields is an important route to improved performance and reliability in fusion devices. Active control of MHD modes is of interest for both the Advanced Tokamak and the Reversed Field Pinch (RFP) configurations. A wide range of unstable, current driven MHD modes is present in the RFP. An ideally conducting wall facing the plasma can in principle provide stabilization to these modes. However, a real, resistive wall characterized by a wall field diffusion time, cannot stabilize the ideal MHD modes unless they rotate with Alfvénic velocity, which is usually not the case. With a resistive wall, the ideal modes are converted into resistive wall modes (RWM) with growth rates comparable to the inverse wall time. Resistive wall modes have been studied in the EXTRAP T2R thin shell RFP device. Growth rates have been measured and found in agreement with linear MHD stability calculations. An advanced system for active control has been developed and installed on the EXTRAP T2R device. The system includes an array of 128 active saddle coils, fully covering the torus surface. Experiments on EXTRAP T2R have for the first time demonstrated simultaneous active suppression of multiple independent RWMs. In experiments with a partial array, coupling of different modes due to the limited number of feedback coils has been observed, in agreement with theory. Different feedback strategies, such as the intelligent shell, the rotating shell, and mode control have been studied. Further, feedback operation with different types of magnetic field sensors, measuring either the radial or the toroidal field components have been compared === QC 20100929
author Yadikin, Dmitriy
author_facet Yadikin, Dmitriy
author_sort Yadikin, Dmitriy
title Resistive Wall Mode Stability and Control in the Reversed Field Pinch
title_short Resistive Wall Mode Stability and Control in the Reversed Field Pinch
title_full Resistive Wall Mode Stability and Control in the Reversed Field Pinch
title_fullStr Resistive Wall Mode Stability and Control in the Reversed Field Pinch
title_full_unstemmed Resistive Wall Mode Stability and Control in the Reversed Field Pinch
title_sort resistive wall mode stability and control in the reversed field pinch
publisher KTH, Alfvénlaboratoriet
publishDate 2006
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-3867
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-7178-285-0
work_keys_str_mv AT yadikindmitriy resistivewallmodestabilityandcontrolinthereversedfieldpinch
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