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research article

Electron cyclotron current drive and suprathermal electron dynamics in the TCV tokamak

Coda, S.  
•
Alberti, S.  
•
Blanchard, P.  
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2003
Nuclear Fusion

Electron cyclotron current drive (ECCD) is an important prospective tool for tailoring the current profile in nextstep devices. To fill the remaining gaps between ECCD theory and experiment, especially in the efficiency and localization of current drive, a better understanding of the physics of suprathermal electrons appears necessary. In TCV the fast electron population is diagnosed by a multichordal, spectrometric hard x-ray camera and by a highfield side electron cyclotron emission radiometer. The main modelling tool is the quasilinear Fokker-Planck code CQL3D, which is equipped with a radial particle transport model. Systematic studies of fast electron dynamics have been performed in TCV with modulated or pulsed electron cyclotron power, followed by coherent averaging, in order to identify the roles of collisional relaxation and radial transport in the dynamics of the suprathermal population. A consistent picture is emerging from experiment and modelling, pointing to the crucial role of the radial transport of suprathermal electrons in the physics of ECCD.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1088/0029-5515/43/11/008
Author(s)
Coda, S.  
Alberti, S.  
Blanchard, P.  
Goodman, T. P.  
Henderson, M. A.  
Nikkola, P.  
Peysson, Y.
Sauter, O.  orcid-logo
Date Issued

2003

Publisher

International Atomic Energy Agency

Published in
Nuclear Fusion
Volume

43

Issue

11

Start page

1361

End page

1370

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CRPP  
SPC  
Available on Infoscience
April 16, 2008
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/21998
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