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Abstract. Ergodic Divertor operation on Tore Supra is characterised by
good performance in terms of divertor physics. Control of particle
recirculation and impurity screening are related to the symmetry both
poloidally and toroidally of the shell of open field lines and to its radial
extent,
r
0.16m. Feedback control of the
divertor plasma temperature has led to controlled radiative divertor
experiments. In particular, good performance is obtained when the plasma is
controlled to be a temperature comparable to the energy involved in the
atomic processes, (15 to 20 eV). For standard discharges with 5 MW total
power and ICRH heating, the low parallel energy flux
10 MW
m- 2 is reduced to
3MWm- 2 with nitrogen
injection. This is achieved at a modest cost in core dilution,
Zeff
0.3. Despite the large volume of open field
lines (
36%) the Ergodic Divertor does not reduce the possible
current in the discharge since stable discharges are achieved with
qsep
2. It is shown that the reorganisation of the current
profile in conjunction with a transport barrier in the electron temperature
on the separatrix stabilises the (2,1) tearing mode. Confinement follows
the standard L-mode confinement. In a few cases at high density and with no
gas injection (wall fuelled discharges), ``RI-like'' modes are reported with
modest increase in confinement (
40%). Despite the lack of core
fuelling on Tore Supra, high densities during ICRH pulses can be achieved
with Greenwald fractions
fG
1. Compatibility with both
ICRH and LH is demonstrated. In particular long pulse operation with flat
top in excess of 20 s are achieved with LHCD.
IAEA 2001