English

Optimizing stellarators for large flows

Plasma Physics 2015-06-19 v1

Abstract

Plasma flow is damped in stellarators because they are not intrinsically ambipolar, unlike tokamaks, in which the flux-surface averaged radial electric current vanishes for any value of the radial electric field. Only quasisymmetric stellarators are intrinsically ambipolar, but exact quasisymmetry is impossible to achieve in non-axisymmetric toroidal configurations. By calculating the violation of intrinsic ambipolarity due to deviations from quasisymmetry, one can derive criteria to assess when a stellarator can be considered quasisymmetric in practice, i.e. when the flow damping is weak enough. Let us denote by α\alpha a small parameter that controls the size of a perturbation to an exactly quasisymmetric magnetic field. Recently, it has been shown that if the gradient of the perturbation is sufficiently small, the flux-surface averaged radial electric current scales as α2\alpha^2 for any value of the collisionality. It was also argued that when the gradient of the perturbation is large, the quadratic scaling is replaced by a more unfavorable one. In this paper, perturbations with large gradients are rigorously treated. In particular, it is proven that for low collisionality a perturbation with large gradient yields, at best, an O(α)O(|\alpha|) deviation from quasisymmetry. Heuristic estimations in the literature incorrectly predicted an O(α3/2)O(|\alpha|^{3/2}) deviation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1405.0841,
  title  = {Optimizing stellarators for large flows},
  author = {Ivan Calvo and Felix I. Parra and J. Arturo Alonso and J. L. Velasco},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1405.0841},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

24 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion

R2 v1 2026-06-22T04:06:00.903Z