scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

W. M. Nevins

Other affiliations: General Atomics
Bio: W. M. Nevins is an academic researcher from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tokamak & Divertor. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 98 publications receiving 3614 citations. Previous affiliations of W. M. Nevins include General Atomics.
Topics: Tokamak, Divertor, Turbulence, Instability, Plasma


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the performance of gyrokinetic and gyrofluid simulations of ion-temperature gradient (ITG)instability and turbulence in tokamak plasmas as well as some tokak plasma thermal transportmodels.
Abstract: The predictions of gyrokinetic and gyrofluid simulations of ion-temperature-gradient(ITG)instability and turbulence in tokamak plasmas as well as some tokamak plasma thermal transportmodels, which have been widely used for predicting the performance of the proposed International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) tokamak [Plasma Physics and Controlled Nuclear Fusion Research, 1996 (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1997), Vol. 1, p. 3], are compared. These comparisons provide information on effects of differences in the physics content of the various models and on the fusion-relevant figures of merit of plasma performance predicted by the models. Many of the comparisons are undertaken for a simplified plasma model and geometry which is an idealization of the plasma conditions and geometry in a Doublet III-D [Plasma Physics and Controlled Nuclear Fusion Research, 1986 (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1987), Vol. 1, p. 159] high confinement (H-mode) experiment. Most of the models show good agreements in their predictions and assumptions for the linear growth rates and frequencies. There are some differences associated with different equilibria. However, there are significant differences in the transport levels between the models. The causes of some of the differences are examined in some detail, with particular attention to numerical convergence in the turbulence simulations (with respect to simulation mesh size, system size and, for particle-based simulations, the particle number). The implications for predictions of fusion plasma performance are also discussed.

953 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
G.S. Lee, J.Y. Kim, S.M. Hwang, Choong-Seock Chang1, H.Y. Chang1, Moo-Hyun Cho2, B.H. Choi, Kyekyoon Kim3, K.W. Cho, S.Y. Cho, K.K. Choh, C.H. Choi, J.H. Choi, J.W. Choi, I.S. Choi, C.J. Do, T.H. Ha, J.H. Han, J.S. Hong, K.H. Hong, N.I. Hur, I.S. Hwang, K.H. Im, H.G. Jhang, Y.S. Jung, B.C. Kim, D.L. Kim, G.H. Kim, H.S. Kim, J.S. Kim, J.Y. Kim, W.C. Kim, Y.S. Kim4, K.H. Kwon, M.C. Kyum, B.J. Lee, D.K. Lee, H.G. Lee, J.M. Lee, S.G. Lee, H.G. Na, Y.K. Oh, J.H. Park, H.C. Ri, Y.S. Ryoo, K.Y. Song, H.L. Yang, J.G. Yang, B.J. Yoo, S.J. Yoo, N.S. Yoon, S.B. Yoon, G.H. You, K.I. You, Wonho Choe1, D.-I. Choi1, S.G. Jeong1, D.Y. Lee1, Young-Soon Bae2, H.S. Kang2, G.N. Kim2, I.S. Ko2, Won Namkung2, J.S. Oh2, Y.D. Bae, Y.S. Cho, B.G. Hong, G. Hong, C.K. Hwang, S.R. In, M.H. Ju, H.J. Lee, B.H. Oh, B.J. Yoon, S. Baang3, H.J. Choi3, J. Hwang3, M.G. Kim3, Y.J. Kim3, Soonil Lee3, J. Yee3, C.S. Yoon3, K.-H. Chung5, SeulChan Hong5, Yong-Seok Hwang5, S.H. Kim5, YooSung Kim5, J.Y. Lim6, D.W. Ha7, S.S. Oh7, K.S. Ryu7, Q.L. Wang7, T.K. Ko8, J. Joo, S. Suh, J.H. Lee, Y.W. Lee, H.S. Shin, I.H. Song, J. Baek, I.Y. Han, Y. Koh, P.Y. Park, C. Ryu9, J.J. Cho4, D.M. Hwang4, J. A. Schmidt10, Hyeon K. Park10, George H. Neilson10, W. Reiersen10, R.T. Simmons10, S. Bernabei10, F. Dahlgren10, Larry R. Grisham10, Stephen Jardin10, C.E. Kessel10, J. Manickam10, S. S. Medley10, Neil Pomphrey10, J.C. Sinnis10, Thomas Brown10, Roscoe White10, K. Young10, J.H. Schultz11, P.W. Wang11, L. Sevier12, Mark D. Carter13, P.M. Ryan13, D.W. Swain13, D. N. Hill14, W. M. Nevins14, Bastiaan J. Braams15 
TL;DR: The Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research (KSTAR) project is the major effort of the national fusion programme of the Republic of Korea as mentioned in this paper, which aims to develop a steady state capable advanced superconducting tokamak to establish a scientific and technological basis for an attractive fusion reactor.
Abstract: The Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research (KSTAR) project is the major effort of the national fusion programme of the Republic of Korea. Its aim is to develop a steady state capable advanced superconducting tokamak to establish a scientific and technological basis for an attractive fusion reactor. The major parameters of the tokamak are: major radius 1.8 m, minor radius 0.5 m, toroidal field 3.5 T and plasma current 2 MA, with a strongly shaped plasma cross-section and double null divertor. The initial pulse length provided by the poloidal magnet system is 20 s, but the pulse length can be increased to 300 s through non-inductive current drive. The plasma heating and current drive system consists of neutral beams, ion cyclotron waves, lower hybrid waves and electron cyclotron waves for flexible profile control in advanced tokamak operating modes. A comprehensive set of diagnostics is planned for plasma control, performance evaluation and physics understanding. The project has completed its conceptual design and moved to the engineering design and construction phase. The target date for the first plasma is 2002.

185 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the physics knowledge relevant to design of a reactor scale tokamak is presented, and projections for ITER are provided in this Chapter of the ITER Physics Basis.
Abstract: Physics knowledge (theory and experiment) in energetic particles relevant to design of a reactor scale tokamak is reviewed, and projections for ITER are provided in this Chapter of the ITER Physics Basis. The review includes single particle effects such as classical alpha particle heating and toroidal field ripple loss, as well as collective instabilities that might be generated in ITER plasmas by energetic alpha particles. The overall conclusion is that fusion alpha particles are expected to provide an efficient plasma heating for ignition and sustained burn in the next step device. The major concern is localized heat loads on the plasma facing components produced by alpha particle loss, which might affect their lifetime in a tokamak reactor.

174 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Letter presents nonlinear gyrokinetic simulations of microtearing mode turbulence, which include collisional and electromagnetic effects and use experimental parameters from a high-β discharge in the National Spherical Torus Experiment to predict the predicted electron thermal transport.
Abstract: This Letter presents non-linear gyrokinetic simulations of microtearing mode turbulence. The simulations include collisional and electromagnetic effects and use experimental parameters from a high beta discharge in the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX). The predicted electron thermal transport is comparable to that given by experimental analysis, and it is dominated by the electromagnetic contribution of electrons free streaming along the resulting stochastic magnetic field line trajectories. Experimental values of flow shear can significantly reduce the predicted transport.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the p-11B fusion rate coefficient was derived for both low (1 keV ≤ T ≤ 70 keV) and high (50 keV ≥ T ≤ 500 keV), and the overall error in these approximations was dominated by errors in the experimental measurement of the underlying cross-sections.
Abstract: Analytic approximations to the p-11B fusion rate coefficient suitable for use at both low (1 keV ≤ T ≤ 70 keV) and high (50 keV ≤ T ≤ 500 keV) temperatures are developed. Comparisons between these analytic approximations and calculations of the p-11B fusion rate coefficient based on numerical integration indicate that the overall error in these approximations is dominated by errors in the experimental measurement of the underlying p-11B fusion cross-sections.

105 citations


Cited by
More filters
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

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ExB shear stabilization model was originally developed to explain the transport barrier formed at the plasma edge in tokamaks after the L (low) to H (high) transition as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: One of the scientific success stories of fusion research over the past decade is the development of the ExB shear stabilization model to explain the formation of transport barriers in magnetic confinement devices. This model was originally developed to explain the transport barrier formed at the plasma edge in tokamaks after the L (low) to H (high) transition. This concept has the universality needed to explain the edge transport barriers seen in limiter and divertor tokamaks, stellarators, and mirror machines. More recently, this model has been applied to explain the further confinement improvement from H (high)-mode to VH (very high)-mode seen in some tokamaks, where the edge transport barrier becomes wider. Most recently, this paradigm has been applied to the core transport barriers formed in plasmas with negative or low magnetic shear in the plasma core. These examples of confinement improvement are of considerable physical interest; it is not often that a system self-organizes to a higher energy state with reduced turbulence and transport when an additional source of free energy is applied to it. The transport decrease that is associated with ExB velocity shear effects also has significant practical consequences for fusion research. The fundamental physics involved in transport reduction is the effect of ExB shear on the growth, radial extent and phase correlation of turbulent eddies in the plasma. The same fundamental transport reduction process can be operational in various portions of the plasma because there are a number ways to change the radial electric field Er. An important theme in this area is the synergistic effect of ExB velocity shear and magnetic shear. Although the ExB velocity shear appears to have an effect on broader classes of microturbulence, magnetic shear can mitigate some potentially harmful effects of ExB velocity shear and facilitate turbulence stabilization.

1,251 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nonlinear gyrokinetic equations play a fundamental role in our understanding of the long-time behavior of strongly magnetized plasmas as mentioned in this paper, and they have been used to describe the turbulent evolution of low-frequency electromagnetic fluctuations in a nonuniform magnetization with arbitrary magnetic geometry.
Abstract: Nonlinear gyrokinetic equations play a fundamental role in our understanding of the long-time behavior of strongly magnetized plasmas. The foundations of modern nonlinear gyrokinetic the- ory are based on three important pillars: (1) a gyrokinetic Vlasov equation written in terms of a gyrocenter Hamiltonian with quadratic low-frequency ponderomotive-like terms; (2) a set of gyrokinetic Maxwell (Poisson-Ampere) equations written in terms of the gyrocenter Vlasov dis- tribution that contain low-frequency polarization (Poisson) and magnetization (Ampere) terms derived from the quadratic nonlinearities in the gyrocenter Hamiltonian; and (3) an exact energy conservationlaw for the gyrokineticVlasov-Maxwell equations that includes all the relevant linear and nonlinear coupling terms. The foundations of nonlinear gyrokinetic theory are reviewed with an emphasis on the rigorous applications of Lagrangian and Hamiltonian Lie-transform perturba- tion methods used in the variationalderivationof nonlineargyrokineticVlasov-Maxwell equations. The physical motivations and applications of the nonlinear gyrokinetic equations, which describe the turbulent evolution of low-frequency electromagnetic fluctuations in a nonuniform magnetized plasmas with arbitrary magnetic geometry, are also discussed.

1,010 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, collisionless electron-temperature-gradient-driven (ETG) turbulence in toroidal geometry is studied via nonlinear numerical simulations via two massively parallel, fully gyrokinetic Vlasov codes.
Abstract: Collisionless electron-temperature-gradient-driven (ETG) turbulence in toroidal geometry is studied via nonlinear numerical simulations To this aim, two massively parallel, fully gyrokinetic Vlasov codes are used, both including electromagnetic effects Somewhat surprisingly, and unlike in the analogous case of ion-temperature-gradient-driven (ITG) turbulence, we find that the turbulent electron heat flux is significantly underpredicted by simple mixing length estimates in a certain parameter regime (ŝ∼1, low α) This observation is directly linked to the presence of radially highly elongated vortices (“streamers”) which lead to very effective cross-field transport The simulations therefore indicate that ETG turbulence is likely to be relevant to magnetic confinement fusion experiments

946 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the processes that will determine the properties of the plasma edge and its interaction with material elements in ITER and compare their predictions with the new experimental results.
Abstract: Progress, since the ITER Physics Basis publication (ITER Physics Basis Editors et al 1999 Nucl. Fusion 39 2137–2664), in understanding the processes that will determine the properties of the plasma edge and its interaction with material elements in ITER is described. Experimental areas where significant progress has taken place are energy transport in the scrape-off layer (SOL) in particular of the anomalous transport scaling, particle transport in the SOL that plays a major role in the interaction of diverted plasmas with the main-chamber material elements, edge localized mode (ELM) energy deposition on material elements and the transport mechanism for the ELM energy from the main plasma to the plasma facing components, the physics of plasma detachment and neutral dynamics including the edge density profile structure and the control of plasma particle content and He removal, the erosion of low- and high-Z materials in fusion devices, their transport to the core plasma and their migration at the plasma edge including the formation of mixed materials, the processes determining the size and location of the retention of tritium in fusion devices and methods to remove it and the processes determining the efficiency of the various fuelling methods as well as their development towards the ITER requirements. This experimental progress has been accompanied by the development of modelling tools for the physical processes at the edge plasma and plasma–materials interaction and the further validation of these models by comparing their predictions with the new experimental results. Progress in the modelling development and validation has been mostly concentrated in the following areas: refinement in the predictions for ITER with plasma edge modelling codes by inclusion of detailed geometrical features of the divertor and the introduction of physical effects, which can play a major role in determining the divertor parameters at the divertor for ITER conditions such as hydrogen radiation transport and neutral–neutral collisions, modelling of the ion orbits at the plasma edge, which can play a role in determining power deposition at the divertor target, models for plasma–materials and plasma dynamics interaction during ELMs and disruptions, models for the transport of impurities at the plasma edge to describe the core contamination by impurities and the migration of eroded materials at the edge plasma and its associated tritium retention and models for the turbulent processes that determine the anomalous transport of energy and particles across the SOL. The implications for the expected performance of the reference regimes in ITER, the operation of the ITER device and the lifetime of the plasma facing materials are discussed.

943 citations