Nuclear Fusion (Jan 2024)

The role of an in-plane electric field during the merging formation of spherical tokamak plasmas

  • M. Inomoto,
  • T. Suzuki,
  • H. Jin,
  • Y. Maeda,
  • Y. Togo,
  • S. Cho,
  • H. Tanabe,
  • Y. Ono,
  • E. Kawamori,
  • S. Usami,
  • R. Yanai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-4326/ad556c
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64, no. 8
p. 086060

Abstract

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Axial merging of two torus plasmas is utilized as a center-solenoid free start-up scheme for a high-beta spherical tokamak (ST) plasma, in which magnetic reconnection under a strong guide field plays dominant roles in energy conversion and equilibrium formation. The ion heating source in magnetic reconnection is the plasma outflow with $E \times B$ drift velocity in the downstream region where the reconnected field lines flow out. Since the inductive reconnection electric field is almost parallel to the magnetic field, particularly in the inboard-side downstream region of magnetic reconnection under a strong guide field, a large electrostatic field in the poloidal plane is spontaneously formed to sustain steady plasma outflow motion in the downstream region. In ST plasma merging experiments, the self-generated electrostatic field in the downstream region does not always balance with the inductive electric field to make the total electric field strictly perpendicular to the total magnetic field. The excess electrostatic field will provide an even faster outflow plasma velocity than the magnetic field line motion and a quick reversal of the toroidal plasma current to form convex flux surfaces.

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