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A. J. H. Donné

Bio: A. J. H. Donné is an academic researcher from European Atomic Energy Community. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasma diagnostics & Tokamak. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 139 publications receiving 3488 citations. Previous affiliations of A. J. H. Donné include University of California, Davis & Eindhoven University of Technology.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the requirements for high reliability in the systems (diagnostics) that provide the measurements in the ITER environment, which is similar to those made on the present-day large tokamaks while the specification of the measurements will be more stringent.
Abstract: In order to support the operation of ITER and the planned experimental programme an extensive set of plasma and first wall measurements will be required. The number and type of required measurements will be similar to those made on the present-day large tokamaks while the specification of the measurements—time and spatial resolutions, etc—will in some cases be more stringent. Many of the measurements will be used in the real time control of the plasma driving a requirement for very high reliability in the systems (diagnostics) that provide the measurements. The implementation of diagnostic systems on ITER is a substantial challenge. Because of the harsh environment (high levels of neutron and gamma fluxes, neutron heating, particle bombardment) diagnostic system selection and design has to cope with a range of phenomena not previously encountered in diagnostic design. Extensive design and R&D is needed to prepare the systems. In some cases the environmental difficulties are so severe that new diagnostic techniques are required. a Author to whom any correspondence should be addressed.

309 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Reflectometry applied to the measurement of density profiles on fusion plasmas has been subject to many recent developments as discussed by the authors, and different techniques used for reflectometry are grouped into three different categories, depending on the frequency spectrum of the probing wave.
Abstract: Reflectometry applied to the measurement of density profiles on fusion plasmas has been subject to many recent developments. After a brief reminder of the principles of reflectometry, the theoretical accuracy of reflectometry measurements is discussed. The main difficulties limiting the performance, namely the plasma fluctuations and the quality of the transmission lines, are analysed. The different techniques used for reflectometry are then presented grouped into three different categories, depending on the frequency spectrum of the probing wave: single frequency, few discrete frequencies, or broad spectrum. The present status and achievements of actual implementations of these techniques are demonstrated, with an analysis of their respective limitations and merits, as well as foreseen developments. Finally, a discussion of the various reflectometry techniques is made, in particular their ability to cope with plasma fluctuations and complex transmission lines, in view of the application to next step machines and very severe environments.

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A highly sensitive imaging Thomson scattering system was developed for low temperature plasma applications at the Pilot-PSI linear plasma generator.
Abstract: A highly sensitive imaging Thomson scattering system was developed for low temperature (0.1-10 eV) plasma applications at the Pilot-PSI linear plasma generator. The essential parts of the diagnostic are a neodymium doped yttrium aluminum garnet laser operating at the second harmonic (532 nm), a laser beam line with a unique stray light suppression system and a detection branch consisting of a Littrow spectrometer equipped with an efficient detector based on a "Generation III" image intensifier combined with an intensified charged coupled device camera. The system is capable of measuring electron density and temperature profiles of a plasma column of 30 mm in diameter with a spatial resolution of 0.6 mm and an observational error of 3% in the electron density (n(e)) and 6% in the electron temperature (T(e)) at n(e) = 4 x 10(19) m(-3). This is achievable at an accumulated laser input energy of 11 J (from 30 laser pulses at 10 Hz repetition frequency). The stray light contribution is below 9 x 10(17) m(-3) in electron density equivalents by the application of a unique stray light suppression system. The amount of laser energy that is required for a n(e) and T(e) measurement is 7 x 10(20)n(e) J, which means that single shot measurements are possible for n(e)>2 x 10(21) m(-3).

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that electron heat transport is governed by alternating layers of good and bad thermal conduction, and the formation of sharp off-axis maxima on the profile was attributed to heat deposition precisely 'on top of' a transport barrier.
Abstract: Experiments with strong localized electron cyclotron heating (ECH) in the RTP tokamak show that electron heat transport is governed by alternating layers of good and bad thermal conduction. For central deposition hot filaments are observed inside the q = 1 radius. Moving the ECH resonance from the centre to the edge of the plasma results in discrete steps of the central electron temperature. The transitions occur when the minimum q value crosses q = 1,2,5/2 or 3, and correspond to the loss of a transport barrier situated close to the rational q value. Close to the transitions a new type of sawtooth activity is observed, characterized by the formation of sharp off-axis maxima on the profile, which collapse abruptly. The formation of the off-axis maxima is attributed to heat deposition precisely `on top of' a transport barrier.

116 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of zonal flow phenomena in plasmas is presented in this article, where the focus is on zonal flows generated by drift waves and the back-interaction of ZF on the drift waves, and various feedback loops by which the system regulates and organizes itself.
Abstract: A comprehensive review of zonal flow phenomena in plasmas is presented. While the emphasis is on zonal flows in laboratory plasmas, planetary zonal flows are discussed as well. The review presents the status of theory, numerical simulation and experiments relevant to zonal flows. The emphasis is on developing an integrated understanding of the dynamics of drift wave–zonal flow turbulence by combining detailed studies of the generation of zonal flows by drift waves, the back-interaction of zonal flows on the drift waves, and the various feedback loops by which the system regulates and organizes itself. The implications of zonal flow phenomena for confinement in, and the phenomena of fusion devices are discussed. Special attention is given to the comparison of experiment with theory and to identifying directions for progress in future research.

1,739 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
23 Aug 1992
TL;DR: Mes premiers remtrciements trout aux auteurs des 206 communications th6matiquts et notes de projet, sans qui ces actes n'auraient 6videmment pas vu le jour.
Abstract: Mes premiers remtrciements trout aux auteurs des 206 communications th6matiquts et notes de projet, sans qui ces actes n'auraient 6videmment pas vu le jour. / Is oat contribu6 h la qualit6 scientifique et ,5 I'hmuog6t~6it6 pr6sentationntlle de leurs articles en refondant les versions iuitiales soumises an comit6 de programme, ea acceptant de suivre les r~gles de pr6sentation indiqu6es, et en nous envoyant parrots plusieurs versions am61ior6es surun point ou sur l'autrc.

824 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The understanding and predictive capability of transport physics and plasma confinement is reviewed from the perspective of achieving reactor-scale burning plasmas in the ITER tokamak, for both core and edge plasma regions.
Abstract: The understanding and predictive capability of transport physics and plasma confinement is reviewed from the perspective of achieving reactor-scale burning plasmas in the ITER tokamak, for both core and edge plasma regions. Very considerable progress has been made in understanding, controlling and predicting tokamak transport across a wide variety of plasma conditions and regimes since the publication of the ITER Physics Basis (IPB) document (1999 Nucl. Fusion 39 2137-2664). Major areas of progress considered here follow. (1) Substantial improvement in the physics content, capability and reliability of transport simulation and modelling codes, leading to much increased theory/experiment interaction as these codes are increasingly used to interpret and predict experiment. (2) Remarkable progress has been made in developing and understanding regimes of improved core confinement. Internal transport barriers and other forms of reduced core transport are now routinely obtained in all the leading tokamak devices worldwide. (3) The importance of controlling the H-mode edge pedestal is now generally recognized. Substantial progress has been made in extending high confinement H-mode operation to the Greenwald density, the demonstration of Type I ELM mitigation and control techniques and systematic explanation of Type I ELM stability. Theory-based predictive capability has also shown progress by integrating the plasma and neutral transport with MHD stability. (4) Transport projections to ITER are now made using three complementary approaches: empirical or global scaling, theory-based transport modelling and dimensionless parameter scaling (previously, empirical scaling was the dominant approach). For the ITER base case or the reference scenario of conventional ELMy H-mode operation, all three techniques predict that ITER will have sufficient confinement to meet its design target of Q = 10 operation, within similar uncertainties.

798 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of zonal flow experiments is presented in this article, with a brief presentation of the current state of the art, diagnostics and data processing techniques for turbulence and zonal flows and the peripheral issues of ZFL physics.
Abstract: The present status of zonal flow experiments is reviewed with the historical process to attain the concept of zonal flows, which provides a new framework for understanding turbulence and transport in toroidal plasmas. The existence of zonal flows is experimentally confirmed to present a new paradigm of plasma turbulence. The paper presents contemporary experiments on zonal flows as major topics with a brief presentation of the zonal flow theories, the diagnostics and data processing techniques for turbulence and zonal flows and the peripheral issues of zonal flow physics. The accumulated experimental results introduced in this review include identification of zonal flows (both stationary zonal flows and geodesic acoustic modes), nonlinear interactions between zonal flows and turbulence, quantification of turbulent Reynolds stress, flow dynamics, energy transfer dynamics between turbulent wave components and the effects of zonal flows on plasma transport. These results have given rise to a new paradigm, namely, that the plasma turbulence is a system of zonal flows and drift waves, with an emphasis on the interaction between the disparate scale structures, e.g. zonal flows (mesoscale) and turbulence (micro-scale).

344 citations

Journal Article
E.W. Herold1

331 citations