Validation of nonlinear gyrokinetic simulations of L- and I-mode plasmas on Alcator C-Mod

21Citations
Citations of this article
24Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

New validation of global, nonlinear, ion-scale gyrokinetic simulations (GYRO) is carried out for L- and I-mode plasmas on Alcator C-Mod, utilizing heat fluxes, profile stiffness, and temperature fluctuations. Previous work at C-Mod found that ITG/TEM-scale GYRO simulations can match both electron and ion heat fluxes within error bars in I-mode [White PoP 2015], suggesting that multi-scale (cross-scale coupling) effects [Howard PoP 2016] may be less important in I-mode than in L-mode. New results presented here, however, show that global, nonlinear, ion-scale GYRO simulations are able to match the experimental ion heat flux, but underpredict electron heat flux (at most radii), electron temperature fluctuations, and perturbative thermal diffusivity in both L- and I-mode. Linear addition of electron heat flux from electron scale runs does not resolve this discrepancy. These results indicate that single-scale simulations do not sufficiently describe the I-mode core transport, and that multi-scale (coupled electron- and ion-scale) transport models are needed. A preliminary investigation with multi-scale TGLF, however, was unable to resolve the discrepancy between ion-scale GYRO and experimental electron heat fluxes and perturbative diffusivity, motivating further work with multi-scale GYRO simulations and a more comprehensive study with multi-scale TGLF.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Creely, A. J., Howard, N. T., Rodriguez-Fernandez, P., Cao, N., Hubbard, A. E., Hughes, J. W., … Sung, C. (2017). Validation of nonlinear gyrokinetic simulations of L- and I-mode plasmas on Alcator C-Mod. Physics of Plasmas, 24(5). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4977466

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free