Abstract
Abstract
Carbon impurity transport is studied in the TCV tokamak using a charge exchange recombination diagnostic. TCVs flexible shaping capabilities were exploited to extend previous impurity transport studies to negative triangularity (δ < 0). A practical way of studying light impurity transport (like C, TCVs main impurity species due to graphite tiled walls) is to investigate the correlations between the impurity ion gradients that, in this study, highlighted significant differences between positive (PT) and negative δ (NT) plasma configurations. δ scans (
−
0.6
<
δ
<
+
0.6
) were performed in limited configurations, but displayed little correlation between C temperature, rotation and density gradients for positive δ. This stiff response for δ > 0 changes for negative δ, where the evolution of
∇
v
tor
was accompanied by variations of
∇
n
C
over a range of negative δ, showing that transport, in NT, is affected by velocity gradients. Similar δ scans were performed with additional NBH (Neutral Beam Heating), with power steps ranging from 0.25 MW to 1.25 MW, highlighting increased momentum confinement in negative δ. Finally, the evolution of intrinsic plasma toroidal rotation across linear to saturated ohmic confinement regime (LOC/SOC) transitions was explored at δ < 0, expanding previous studies performed in TCV for
δ
>
0 (Bagnato et al 2023 Nucl. Fusion
63 056006). Toroidal rotation reversal was not observed for δ < 0, despite clear LOC/SOC transitions, confirming that these two phenomena occur concomitantly only in a restricted number of cases and under specific conditions.