Simulation and analysis of a high-k electron-scale turbulence diagnostic for MAST-U
Speirs, D.C. and Ruiz Ruiz, J. and Giacomin, M. and Hall-Chen, V.H. and Phelps, A.D.R. and Vann, R. and Huggard, P.G. and Wang, H. and Field, A. and Ronald, K. (2025) Simulation and analysis of a high-k electron-scale turbulence diagnostic for MAST-U. Nuclear Fusion, 65 (4). 046019. ISSN 1741-4326 (https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-4326/adb761)
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Abstract
Plasma turbulence on disparate spatial and temporal scales plays a key role in defining the level of confinement achievable in tokamaks, with the development of reduced numerical models for cross-scale turbulence effects informed by experimental measurements an essential step. MAST-U is a well-equipped facility having instruments to measure ion and electron scale turbulence at the plasma edge. However, measurement of core electron scale turbulence is challenging, especially in H mode. Using a novel synthetic diagnostic approach, we present simulated measurement specifications of a proposed highly optimised mm-wave based collective scattering instrument for measuring both normal and bi-normal electron scale turbulence in the core and edge of MAST-U. A powerful modelling framework has been developed that combines beam-tracing techniques with gyrokinetic simulations to predict the sensitivity and spectral range of measurement, with a quasi-numerical approach used to analyse the corresponding instrument selectivity functions. For the reconstructed MAST 022769 shot, a maximum measurable normalised bi-normal wavenumber of k⊥ ρe∼ 0.6 was predicted in the core and k⊥ ρe∼ 0.79 near the pedestal, with localisation lengths LFWHM ranging from ∼0.4 m in the core at k⊥ ρe∼ 0.1 to ∼0.08 m at k⊥ ρe> 0.45. Synthetic diagnostic analysis for the 022769 shot using CGYRO gyrokinetic simulation spectra reveal that electron temperature gradient turbulence wavenumbers of peak spectral intensity comfortably fall within the measurable/detectable range of the instrument from the core to the pedestal. The proposed diagnostic opens up opportunities to study new regimes of turbulence and confinement, particularly in association with upcoming non-inductive, microwave based current drive experiments on MAST-U and can provide insight into cross-scale turbulence effects, while having suitability to operate during burning plasma scenarios on future reactors such as Spherical Tokamak for Energy Production.
ORCID iDs
Speirs, D.C.


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Item type: Article ID code: 92182 Dates: DateEvent1 April 2025Published20 March 2025Published Online18 February 2025AcceptedSubjects: Science > Physics > Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity Department: Faculty of Science > Physics Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 25 Feb 2025 15:20 Last modified: 07 Apr 2025 09:00 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/92182