About us
Espace utilisateur
Education
INSTN offers more than 40 diplomas from operator level to post-graduate degree level. 30% of our students are international students.
Professionnal development
Professionnal development
Find a training course
INSTN delivers off-the-self or tailor-made training courses to support the operational excellence of your talents.
Human capital solutions
At INSTN, we are committed to providing our partners with the best human capital solutions to develop and deliver safe & sustainable projects.
Thesis
Home   /   Thesis   /   Gyrokinetic modelling of the nonlinear interaction between energetic particle-driven instabilities and microturbulence in tokamak plasmas

Gyrokinetic modelling of the nonlinear interaction between energetic particle-driven instabilities and microturbulence in tokamak plasmas

Corpuscular physics and outer space Numerical simulation Plasma physics and laser-matter interactions Technological challenges

Abstract

Tokamak plasmas are strongly nonlinear systems far from thermodynamic equilibrium, in which instabilities of very different spatial scales coexist, ranging from large-scale macroscopic oscillations to microturbulence. The presence of energetic ions produced by fusion reactions or by auxiliary heating further enhances these instabilities through wave–particle resonances. Microturbulence is responsible for heat and particle transport in the thermal plasma, while instabilities driven by energetic particles can induce their radial transport and, consequently, their losses. Both phenomena degrade the performance of present tokamak plasmas, and possibly also those of burning plasmas such as ITER.
Recent results, however, show that these instabilities, which have long been studied separately, can interact nonlinearly, and that this interaction may lead to an unexpected improvement of plasma confinement.
The objective of this project is to investigate these multiscale interactions using the gyrokinetic code GTC, which is able to simultaneously simulate turbulence and energetic-particle-driven instabilities. This work aims to improve the understanding of the nonlinear mechanisms governing plasma confinement and to identify optimal regimes for future fusion plasmas.

Laboratory

Institut de recherche sur la fusion par confinement magnétique
Service de Physique des Plasmas de Fusion
GEDS
Aix-Marseille Université
Top envelopegraduation-hatlicensebookuserusersmap-markercalendar-fullbubblecrossmenuarrow-down