Title: Plasma Characterisation Using Combined Mach/Triple Probe Techniques
1Plasma Characterisation Using Combined
Mach/Triple Probe Techniques
- W. M. Solomon, M. G. Shats
- Plasma Research Laboratory
- Research School of Physical Sciences and
Engineering - Australian National University
- Canberra ACT 0200
2What Is A Mach Probe?
- Two identical collectors separated by a ceramic
insulator - The insulator makes the Mach probe sensitive to
plasma drifts. Generally,
3Evidence That Mach Probes Are Sensitive to
Fluctuations
- Probes often used to study density fluctuations,
. - Observe
- If probe was primarily sensitive to , then
would not expect this.
4Bohm Theory Revised Mach Probe Saturation
Currents And Drift Velocity
- Ions arrive at the probe sheath with the ion
acoustic velocity
- Far from the probe sheath, the ions have an
average velocity dependent on their thermal
velocity and their drift.
5Bohm Theory Revised Mach Probe Saturation
Currents And Drift Velocity
- Using conservation of energy
- and assuming a Boltzmann distribution for the
density - The saturation current takes the form
- We can then determine drift velocity by taking
the ratio of the upstream/downstream
currents where
6Enter the TMT Probe
- Since the plasma is unmagnetised for ions, we may
align the Mach probe so that it is sensitive to
radial motions. - Two triple probes surround the radial Mach probe
all are aligned to the same flux surface by
electron gun.
7TMT Solution Algorithm Described
- Row 2 shows signals readily determined from the
probes.
- Te and ?p (Row 3) readily determined by the
triple probe
8TMT Solution Algorithm Described
- Then, with some arbitrary initial choice of Ti ,
compute
- Compute ne and then the flux
9TMT Solution Algorithm Described
- Invoke the condition of ambipolarity of the
fluctuation driven fluxes
- Practically, minimise by modifying Ti
- Output of algorithm is then time-resolved
measurements of Ti , ne , and Vri , with
fluctuations properly accounted for.
10Why Do Ion Temperature Fluctuations Appear High?
-
- As large (or larger) than !
- Observe
- If have high levels for then is also higher
from - But is it real???
11More Probe Measurements! Testing The Condition
Of Ambipolarity
- What if ?
- Total fluxes must be still be equal in steady
state, but fluctuations may drive non-ambipolar
fluxes. - From Poissons equation
- time-resolved measurements of Er will help
answer this question.
12Ahhhh! More Probes Fork Probe Measures Radial
Electric Field
- A fork probe, consisting of two more triple
probes radially separated (slight toroidal
displacement) is added to the probe set, also
aligned by electron gun. - Measure
13Combining Measurable Signals And Solving For The
Rest
- Summarising our unknowns as functions of Ti .
- Combining them into Poissons equation
- In the above equation, the remaining unknown is
. Then solutions take the form - We can choose so as to satisfy
14Estimating The Total Flux
- To proceed, we need an estimate of the total
flux, - Use Ionisation rate andapproximate profiles
forne and nn (neutraldensity) to estimateflux.
In steady state
15The Results
16The Results
17Conclusion Fluctuations Can Drive Non-Ambipolar
Fluxes
- The complex of probes allows local time-resolved
measurements of key plasma parameters - Electron density
- Electron and Ion Temperature
- Electron and Ion particle Fluxes
- Fluctuations fluxes in H-1 are indeed
non-ambipolar in L-mode. - In fact, fluctuations seem to drive only electron
transport, as in the regions of
maximum fluctuations.