Global electromagnetic gyrokinetic simulations of internal transport barriers in reversed-shear tokamaks

Abstract

This work aims at improving our understanding of the conditions enabling the development of an Internal transport barriers (ITB), using a more comprehensive physical model, including low-β electromagnetic flux-driven simulations. Our key findings are that electron dynamics is crucial for ITB formation even in an ITG scenario and that having qmin close to a lowest order rational value (2 in our simulations) to allow for eddies self-interaction is a necessary ingredient. Electron dynamics has two critical effects. First, it leads to a structure formation characterized by strong zonal flows shearing rate, reduction of turbulence and profile corrugation. Second, it leads to zonal current sheets that result in a broadening of the minimum-q region, qualitatively consistent with the flux-tube simulations of Volcokas et al. [1]. Flux-driven simulations performed with qmin=2 reveal the development of the transport barrier in the ion channel, forming at inner and outer radial positions with respect to the qmin position. The ITB formation in flux-driven setup is not recovered if qmin = 2.03. Additionally, a simulation at higher * indicates that the extent of the flattened region of the q-profile due to turbulent self-interaction does not change proportionally to * or to i, but somewhere in between. On the other hand, the input power required to achieve similar on-axis temperatures appears to exhibit almost GyroBohm scaling (for the two considered * values). Furthermore, considering an initial q-profile with qmin = 2.01, flux-driven simulations show that partial self-interaction can evolve to complete self-interaction. This occurs due to turbulent-driven zonal currents that lower and flatten the q-profile down to qmin = 2.0, in line with what is reported in Volcokas et al.[1].

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