Merlo, G.Huang, Z.Marini, C.Brunner, S.Coda, S.Hatch, D.Jarema, D.Jenko, F.Sauter, O.Villard, L.2021-04-102021-04-102021-04-102021-04-0110.1088/1361-6587/abe39dhttps://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/177185WOS:000625102000001Global gradient driven gyrokinetic simulations performed with the Gyrokinetic Electromagnetic Numerical Experiment (GENE) code are used to investigate Tokamak a configuration variable (TCV) plasmas with negative triangularity. Considering limited L-mode plasmas, the numerical results are able to reproduce the actual transport level over a major fraction of the plasma minor radius for a plasma with delta LCFS=-0.3 delta. For the same heat flux, a larger electron temperature gradient is sustained by delta<0, in turn resulting in an improved electron energy confinement. In agreement with the experiments, a reduction of the electron density fluctuations is also seen. Local flux-tube simulations are used to gauge the magnitude of nonlocal effects. Surprisingly, very little differences are found between local and global approaches for delta>0, while local results yield a strong overestimation of the heat fluxes when delta<0. Despite the high sensitivity of the turbulence level with respect to the input parameters, global effects appear to play a crucial role in the negative triangularity plasma and must be retained to reconcile simulations and experiments. Finally, a general stabilizing effect of negative triangularity, reducing fluxes and fluctuations by a factor dependent on the actual profiles, is recovered.Physics, Fluids & PlasmasPhysicsgyrokinetic simulationsturbulent transportnegative triangularityNonlocal effects in negative triangularity TCV plasmastext::journal::journal article::research article