Ion temperature of 100 million degrees achieved

The National Institutes of Natural Sciences National Institute for Fusion Science has begun deuterium experiments on the Large Helical Device (LHD). Researchers performing experiments using a high-power deuterium beam to heat deuterium plasma have achieved an ion temperature of 100 million degrees. This research has significantly advanced experiments for demonstrating the fusion feasibility of helical plasma.
In order to create burning plasma, it is necessary to steadily maintain high-temperature and high-density plasma. In plasma research conducted to date on the LHD, utilizing the special characteristics of helical-type magnetic confinement, researchers have demonstrated steady-state operation and high-density plasma. Thus, achieving high temperatures became an important issue. The fusion reaction, which indicates utilization of power generation, is the reaction of deuterium and tritium, of which the cross section is at its highest in the range from 100 million degrees to 1000 million degrees. When the temperature falls below 100 million degrees, it becomes difficult for the reaction to occur, because when the temperature becomes one-tenth, the cross-section of the fusion reaction becomes 1/10,000. That is, in order to maintain fusion burning, the ion temperature must exceed 100 million degrees. In the LHD, to date we have performed experiments that have aimed to achieve higher-temperature in hydrogen plasmas. However, the researchers were unable to achieve temperatures that exceeded 100 million degrees.
In the LHD, the researchers injected from outside a beam for plasma heating (NBI heating). As NBI heating, we use both methods for accelerating the positive ions and for accelerating the negative ions. Using the positive ion beam, when switching from the hydrogen beam to the deuterium beam it becomes possible to increase beam power due to making the beam energy higher. On the other hand, for the negative beam when the ion species changes from hydrogen to deuterium the beam current decreases resulting in beam power decrease. That is, by combining the positive ion deuterium beam and the negative ion hydrogen beam, the heating power is at its highest. Following this method, we performed high power beam plasma heating experiments than ever. As a result, we succeeded in generating plasma bearing an ion temperature of 100 million degrees for the first time in a helical plasma. This high ion temperature plasma has a profile called internal transport barrier (ITB).
When an ITB is formed, heat transport is suppressed and the core area of the plasma can reach a high temperature due to a steep temperature gradient having been formed. The characteristic of selectively expelling impurity ions that entered the plasma, which was discovered in hydrogen plasma experiments, also has been confirmed in deuterium ITB plasma in which the temperature exceeds 100 million degrees. That is, we were also able to confirm that there are characteristics appropriate to fusion reactor plasmas. In the future, we will investigate in detail the transport characteristics of plasma whose temperature exceeds 100 million degrees. By examining in detail the characteristics of hydrogen plasma and deuterium plasma, we anticipate research results that will link also to clarification of the ion mass dependency (isotope effect) regarding heat transport in the plasma, which has been a long-standing riddle in magnetic field confinement plasma experiments.
Provided by National Institutes of Natural Sciences