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Akira Miyahara

Bio: Akira Miyahara is an academic researcher from Nagoya University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tokamak & Plasma. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 77 publications receiving 417 citations.
Topics: Tokamak, Plasma, Ion, Ion source, Sputtering


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the status of the data base for each item and discuss on the basis of graphite chemistry and physics the design of plasma facing component such as tile attachment, active cooling capability, etc., which are extremely important for the next generation fusion machines such as ITER.

50 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Advanced Limiter Test (ALT-II) is a toroidal belt pump limiter in the TEXTOR tokamak as discussed by the authors, which is composed of 8 blade segments which form an axisymmetric toroidal Belt of 3.4 m2 exposed surface area, located on the outside of the torus at 45° below the horizontal midplane.

38 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, runaway-electron events are simulated with an electron linear accelerator to better understand the observed runawayelectron damage to tokamak first wall materials and to consider the runaway-energy issue in further materials development and selection.

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a textor helium removal experiment with the pump-limiter ALT-II has been carried out and it was found that the He is removed from the discharge in an e-folding time of about half a second for neutral beam heated plasmas and in an EF of about 1.5 s in an OH plasma, and the exhaust efficiency of helium amounts to about 8% and is close to the one for deuterium.

18 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the underlying physical processes and the existing experimental database of plasma-material interactions both in tokamaks and laboratory simulation facilities for conditions of direct relevance to next-step fusion reactors.
Abstract: The major increase in discharge duration and plasma energy in a next step DT fusion reactor will give rise to important plasma-material effects that will critically influence its operation, safety and performance. Erosion will increase to a scale of several centimetres from being barely measurable at a micron scale in today's tokamaks. Tritium co-deposited with carbon will strongly affect the operation of machines with carbon plasma facing components. Controlling plasma-wall interactions is critical to achieving high performance in present day tokamaks, and this is likely to continue to be the case in the approach to practical fusion reactors. Recognition of the important consequences of these phenomena stimulated an internationally co-ordinated effort in the field of plasma-surface interactions supporting the Engineering Design Activities of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor project (ITER), and significant progress has been made in better understanding these issues. The paper reviews the underlying physical processes and the existing experimental database of plasma-material interactions both in tokamaks and laboratory simulation facilities for conditions of direct relevance to next step fusion reactors. Two main topical groups of interaction are considered: (i) erosion/redeposition from plasma sputtering and disruptions, including dust and flake generation and (ii) tritium retention and removal. The use of modelling tools to interpret the experimental results and make projections for conditions expected in future devices is explained. Outstanding technical issues and specific recommendations on potential R&D avenues for their resolution are presented.

1,187 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: In this paper, the authors reviewed the physics of diveror in tokamaks from an experimental point of view, although where possible simple analytic modelling is included, and provided a framework for comparison of the experimental results with simply derived expectations.
Abstract: The physics of divertors in tokamaks is reviewed, primarily from an experimental point of view, although where possible simple analytic modelling is included. The paper covers the four main subject areas at issue in divertor research: (1) the wide dispersal of plasma power exhausted from the main plasma, (2) the production of sufficiently high gas pressures in the vicinity of pump ducts to enable the removal of fuel and helium (`ash') gas from the system, (3) the elimination or reduction of impurity production and (4) the screening of impurities produced, or intentionally added, at the plasma boundary from the plasma core. A simple analytic model, the `two-point' model, is introduced early in the paper and provides a framework for comparison of the experimental results, drawn from many machines, with simply derived expectations. Conclusions regarding the direction of future research priorities are made.

362 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the atomic physics considerations for interpreting the data, including the influence of the plasma environment, are reviewed, and examples of recent applications to fusion studies are presented, as well as a review of the application of charge exchange spectroscopy in fusion plasmas.
Abstract: Charge-exchange spectroscopy in fusion plasmas entails the use of optical transitions that follow electron transfer from a neutral atom into an excited state of an impurity ion. In most applications, the sources of neutral particles are high-energy beams employed either for heating or for the specific purpose of active plasma diagnosis. The transitions following charge exchange are particularly useful for determining the densities of fully stripped low-Z ions and for measuring ion temperatures and plasma rotation, although they have also been exploited for other purposes. In this review, the atomic physics considerations for interpreting the data, including the influence of the plasma environment, are reviewed, and examples of recent applications to fusion studies are presented.

290 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of particle-solid processes pertinent to modeling plasma-wall interactions is presented in this paper, and sets of recommended data are given, where analytic formulas are used where possible; otherwise, data are presented in the form of tables and graphs.
Abstract: A review of particle-solid processes pertinent to modelling plasma-wall interactions is presented, and sets of recommended data are given. Analytic formulas are used where possible; otherwise, data are presented in the form of tables and graphs. The incident particles considered are e−, H, D, T, He, C, O, and selfions. The materials include the metals aluminum, beryllium, copper, molybdenum, stainless steel, titanium, and tungsten and the nonmetals carbon and TiC. The processes covered are light ion reflection, hydrogen and helium trapping and detrapping, desorption, evaporation, sputtering, chemical effects in sputtering, blistering caused by implantation of helium and hydrogen, secondary electron emission by electrons and particles, and arcing.

224 citations