The impact of the mass isotope on plasma conflnement and transport properties has been investigated in Ohmically-heated hydrogen and deuterium plasmas in the HL-2 A tokamak.Experimental results show that under similar...The impact of the mass isotope on plasma conflnement and transport properties has been investigated in Ohmically-heated hydrogen and deuterium plasmas in the HL-2 A tokamak.Experimental results show that under similar discharge parameters the deuterium plasma has better conflnement and lower turbulent transport than the hydrogen one,and concomitantly,it is found that the magnitude of geodesic acoustic mode zonal flows,the tilting angle of the Reynolds stress tensor and the turbulence correlation lengths are all larger in the edge region of the deuterium plasma.The results provide direct experimental evidence on the importance of the nonlinear energy coupling between ambient turbulence and zonal flows for governing the isotope effects in fusion plasmas.展开更多
基金partially supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China(Nos.11820101004,11875017,12075079 and 51821005)partially supported by the National Key R&D Program of China(No.2019YFE03020000)+2 种基金the National Magnetic Conflnement Fusion Science Program of China(No.2018YFE0310300)the Science and Technology Plan Project in Sichuan Province of China(No.2020YFSY0047)Sichuan International Science and Technology Innovation Cooperation Project(No.2021YFH0066)。
文摘The impact of the mass isotope on plasma conflnement and transport properties has been investigated in Ohmically-heated hydrogen and deuterium plasmas in the HL-2 A tokamak.Experimental results show that under similar discharge parameters the deuterium plasma has better conflnement and lower turbulent transport than the hydrogen one,and concomitantly,it is found that the magnitude of geodesic acoustic mode zonal flows,the tilting angle of the Reynolds stress tensor and the turbulence correlation lengths are all larger in the edge region of the deuterium plasma.The results provide direct experimental evidence on the importance of the nonlinear energy coupling between ambient turbulence and zonal flows for governing the isotope effects in fusion plasmas.