1 / 20

Kinetic Effects on the Linear and Nonlinear Stability Properties of Field-Reversed Configurations

2003 APS DPP Meeting, October 2003. Kinetic Effects on the Linear and Nonlinear Stability Properties of Field-Reversed Configurations. E. V. Belova PPPL. In collaboration with : R. C. Davidson, H. Ji, M. Yamada ( PPPL ). OUTLINE:. I. Linear stability (n=1 tilt mode, prolate FRCs)

byrd
Télécharger la présentation

Kinetic Effects on the Linear and Nonlinear Stability Properties of Field-Reversed Configurations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2003 APS DPP Meeting, October 2003 Kinetic Effects on the Linear and Nonlinear Stability Properties of Field-Reversed Configurations E. V. Belova PPPL In collaboration with : R. C. Davidson, H. Ji, M. Yamada (PPPL)

  2. OUTLINE: I. Linear stability (n=1 tilt mode, prolate FRCs) - FLR stabilization - Hall term versus FLR effects - resonant particle effects - finite electron pressure and toroidal magnetic field effects II. Nonlinear effects - nonlinear saturation of n=1 tilt mode in kinetic FRCs - nonlinear evolution in the small Larmor radius regimes

  3. Ψ R R φ Z FRC parameters:

  4. FRC stability with respect to the tilt mode: Theory vs experiment Possible non-ideal MHD effects, which may be responsible for the experimentally observed FRC behavior: • Thermal ion FLR effects. • Hall term effects. • Sheared flows. • Profile effects (racetrack vs elliptical configurations). • Electron physics (finite P , kinetic effects). • Finite toroidal magnetic field. • Resonant ion effects, stochasticity of ion orbits. • Particle loss. • Nonlinear kinetic effects. Comprehensive nonlinear kinetic simulations are needed in order to study FRC stability properties. e

  5. Numerical Studies of FRC stability • FRC stability code – HYM (Hybrid & MHD): • 3-D nonlinear • Three different physical models: • - Resistive MHD & Hall-MHD • - Hybrid (fluid e, particle ions) • - MHD/particle (fluid thermal plasma, • energetic particle ions) • For particles: delta-f /full-f scheme; analytic • Grad-Shafranov equilibria • Parallel (MPI) version for distributed memory parallel • computers. Scaled Fixed problem size

  6. I. Linear stability: FLR effects FLR effects – determines linear stability of the n=1 tilt mode. Elliptical equilibria ( special p() profile[Barnes,2001] ) - For E/S*<0.5 growth rate is function of S*/E. - For E/S*>0.5 growth rate depends on both E and S*. Racetrack equilibria- S*/E-scaling does not apply. New empirical scaling: E=4 E=6 E=12 Hybrid simulations for equilibria with elliptical separatrix and different elongations: E=4, 6, 12. For E/S*>0.5, resonant ion effects are important. S*/E parameter determines the experimental stability boundary [M. Tuszewski,1998].

  7. I. Linear stability: Hall effects Recent analytic results:stability of the n=1 tilt mode at S*/E1 [Barnes, 2002] To isolate Hall effects  Hall-MHD simulations FLR effects hybrid simulations with full ion dynamics, but turn off Hall term Without Hall With Hall 1/S* 1/S* Hall-MHD (elliptic separatrix, E=6): growth rate is reduced by a factor of two for S*/E1. Hall stabilization: not sufficient to explain stability. Growth rate reduction is mostly due to FLR; however, Hall effects determine linear mode structure and rotation.

  8. I. Linear stability: Hall effect In Hall-MHD simulations tilt mode is more localized compared to MHD; also has a complicated axial structure. MHD • Hall effects: • modest reduction in  (50% at most) • rotation (in the electron direction ) • significant change in mode structure Hall-MHD Change in linear mode structure from MHD and Hall-MHD simulations with S*=5, E=6.

  9. Finite electron pressure and toroidal field effects • Effects offinite P :increasing fraction of total pressure carried by electrons has a • destabilizing effect of the tilt mode due to effective reduction of the ion FLR effects. e 0.75 P =0.75P e 0.875 P =0.5P e 0.5 P =0.75P P =0.3P 0.3 e e P =0 P =0.5P e e P =0 P =0 e e • Effects ofweakequilibrium toroidal field(symmetric profile): - Destabilizing for B ~ 10-30% of external field; growth rate increases by ~40% for B =0.2 B (S*=20). - Reduction of average thermal ion Larmor radius. - Maximum beta is still very large β ~ 10-100.  ext 

  10. I. Linear stability: Resonant effects Betatron resonance condition: [Finn’79]. Ω – ω = ω β Growth rate depends on: 1. number of resonant particles 2. slope of distribution function 3. stochasticity of particle orbits

  11. I. Linear stability: Resonant effects Particle distribution in phase-space for different S* MHD-like 0.05 0.04 0.03 0.02 0.01 0.00 (E=6 elliptic separatrix) Lines correspond to resonances: -0.1 -0.05 0.00 0.05 0.1 As configuration size reduces, characteristic equilibrium frequencies grow, and particles spread out along  axis – number of particles at resonance increases. Kinetic 0.15 0.10 0.05 0.00 Stochasticity of ion orbits – expected to reduce growth rate. -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4

  12. Stochasticity of ion orbits For majority of ions µ is not conserved in typical FRC: For elongated FRCs with E>>1, Two basic types of ion orbits (E>>1): Betatron orbit (regular) Betatron orbit Driftorbit Drift orbit (stochastic) For drift orbit at the FRC ends  stochasticity.

  13. Regularity condition Number of regular orbits ~ 1/S* regular Racetrack, E=7 stochastic Elliptic, E=6, 12 Regular versus stochastic portions of particle phase space for S*=20, E=6. Width of regular region ~ 1/S*. Regularity condition: Regularity condition can be obtained considering particle motion in the 2D effective potential: Shape of the effective potential depends on value of toroidal angular momentum . (Betatron orbit) (Betatron or drift, depending on )

  14. I. Linear stability: Resonant effects Hybrid simulations with different values of S*=10-75 (E=6, elliptic) Scatter plots in plane; resonant particles have large weights. Ω – ω = lω , l=1, 3, … β For elliptical FRCs, FLR stabilization is function of S*/E ratio, whereas number of regular orbits, and the resonant drive scale as ~1/S*  long configurations have advantage for stability. -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Simulations with small S* show that small fraction of resonant ions (<5%) contributes more than ½ into energy balance – which proves the resonant nature of instability.

  15. I. Non-linear effects: Large Larmor radius FRC Nonlinear evolution of tilt mode in kinetic FRC is different from MHD: - instabilities saturate nonlinearly when s is small. _ Possible saturation mechanisms: - flattening of distribution function in resonant region, - configuration appear to evolve into one with elliptic separatrix and larger E, - velocity shear stabilization due to ion spin-up. _ Hybrid simulations with E=4, s=2, elliptical separatrix.

  16. I. Non-linear effects: Large Larmor radius FRC Energy plots from nonlinear hybrid simulations E=4, s=2 n=2 n=1 LSX [Slough, Hoffman, 93] n=3 Ion velocity at FRC midplane. n=4 0.2 0.1 0.0 • Nonlinear simulations show growth and saturation of • the n=1 tilt mode. • In the nonlinear phase, the growth of and saturation of • the n=2 rotational mode is observed. • Ion spin-up with V ~ 0.1-0.3 V at t ~ 40. • Similar behavior found for other FRC configurations • with different shapes and profiles. i A R Radial profile of ion flow velocity at t=53.

  17. I. Non-linear effects: Large Larmor radius FRC Equilibrium with E=6 and s=2.3, elliptical shape. Contour plots of plasma density. t=44 n=0 n=1 n=2 t=60 t=76 R Vector plot of poloidal magnetic field. Z t=76

  18. II. Non-linear effects: Small Larmor radius FRC _ Nonlinear hybrid simulations for large s (MHD-like regime). • Linear growth rate is comparable to MHD. • • No saturation, but • • Nonlinear evolution is considerably • slower than MHD. • Field reversal ( ) • is still present after t=30 t . • Effects of particle loss: • About one-half of the particles are lost by • t=30 t . • Particle loss from open field lines • results in a faster linear growth due • to the reduction in separatrix beta. • Ions spin up in toroidal (diamagnetic) • direction with V0.3v . A 0 10 20 30 A R Z (a) Energy plots for n=0-4 modes, (b) Vector plots of poloidal magnetic field, at t=32 t . A A

  19. Summary • FLR effects – main stabilizing mechanism. • s/E scaling has been demonstrated for elliptical FRCs. • Resonant effects – shown to drive instability at low s. • Stochasticity of ion orbits is not strong enough to prevent instability; • regularity condition has been derived; number of regular orbits has been • shown to scale linearly with 1/s. • Hall term – defines mode rotation and structure. • Finite toroidal field and electron pressure are destabilizing. • Nonlinear evolution: saturation at low s, n=2 rotational mode; • Larger s - nonlinear evolution is slow compared to the MHD; • Ion spin-up in diamagnetic direction. _ _ _ _ _

  20. Conclusions Pressure evolution form SSX-FRC simulations. • FRC behavior at low-s is best understood, more realistic theoretical studies provide explanation for experimentally observed FRC properties. • Large-s FRCs: new formation schemes (other than theta-pinch) and better theoretical understanding of large-s FRC stability properties are needed. • New formation methods: - Counter-helicity spheromak merging (U. Tokyo, SSX-FRC, SPIRIT). - RMF (U. Washington, PPPL). • Numerical studies using HYM code will guide development of SPIRIT program.

More Related