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Abstract. The goals of DIII-D Advanced Tokamak (AT) experiments are to
investigate and optimize the upper limits of energy confinement and MHD
stability in a tokamak plasma, and to simultaneously maximize the fraction
of non-inductive current drive. Significant overall progress has been made
in the past 2 years, as the performance figure of merit
H89P of 9 has been achieved in ELMing H-mode
for over 16
without sawteeth. We also operated at
7 for over 35
or
3
, with the duration limited by hardware. Real-time
feedback control of
(at 95% of the stability boundary), optimizing
the plasma shape (e.g.,
, divertor strike- and X-point,
double/single null balance), and particle control (
ne/nGW
0.3,
Zeff < 2.0) were necessary for the long-pulse results. A
new quiescent double barrier (QDB) regime with simultaneous inner- and edge-
transport barriers and no ELMs has been discovered with
H89P of 7. The QDB regime has been obtained
to date only with counter neutral beam injection. Further modification and
control of internal transport barriers (ITBs) has also been demonstrated
with impurity injection (broader barrier), pellets, and ECH (strong electron
barrier). The new Divertor-2000, a key ingredient in all these discharges,
provides effective density, impurity and heat flux control in the
high-triangularity plasma shapes. Discharges at
ne/nGW
1.4 have been obtained with gas puffing by maintaining the edge pedestal
pressure; this operation is easier with Divertor-2000. We are developing
several other tools required for AT operation, including real-time
feedback control of resistive wall modes (RWMs) with external coils, and
control of neoclassical tearing modes (NTMs) with electron cyclotron current
drive (ECCD).
IAEA 2001