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research article

Runaway electron beam stability and decay in COMPASS

Ficker, O.
•
Macusova, E.
•
Mlynar, J.  
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September 1, 2019
Nuclear Fusion

This paper presents two scenarios used for generation of a runaway electron (RE) beam in the COMPASS tokamak with a focus on the decay phase and control of the beam. The first scenario consists of massive gas injection of argon into the current ramp-up phase, leading to a disruption accompanied by runaway plateau generation. In the second scenario, injection of a smaller amount of gas is used in order to isolate the RE beam from high-temperature plasma. The performances of current control and radial and vertical position feedback control in the second scenario were experimentally studied and analysed. The role of RE energy in the radial position stability of the RE beam seems to be crucial. A comparison of the decay phase of the RE beam in various amounts of Ar or Ne was studied using absolute extreme ultraviolet (AXUV) tomography and hard x-ray (HXR) intensity measurement. Argon clearly leads to higher HXR fluxes for the same current decay rate than neon, while radiated power based on AXUV measurements is larger for Ne in the same set of discharges.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1088/1741-4326/ab210f
Web of Science ID

WOS:000478690900001

Author(s)
Ficker, O.
Macusova, E.
Mlynar, J.  
Bren, D.
Casolari, A.
Cerovsky, J.
Farnik, M.
Grover, O.
Havlicek, J.
Havranek, A.
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Date Issued

2019-09-01

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd

Published in
Nuclear Fusion
Volume

59

Issue

9

Article Number

096036

Subjects

Physics, Fluids & Plasmas

•

Physics

•

tokamaks

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disruptions

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runaway electrons

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tomography

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

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August 13, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/159738
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