TY - JOUR
T1 - Ideal and resistive impurity parallel-velocity-gradient instability
AU - Cuerva-Lazaro, G.
AU - Lesur, M.
AU - Gürcan, O. D.
AU - Bourgeois, J.
AU - Maestracci, C.
AU - Gravier, E.
AU - Kosuga, Y.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
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PY - 2025/7/31
Y1 - 2025/7/31
N2 - The presence of impurity ions in magnetically confined plasmas can significantly influence micro-instabilities, impacting cross-field transport and ultimately affecting fusion performance. In particular, Parallel Velocity Gradient (PVG) instability, commonly observed at the edge of fusion devices and in linear devices, can be strongly influenced by impurities. Inspired by the drift-wave models of Hasegawa-Mima and Hasegawa-Watakani, this article develops and examines two distinct fluid models: the ideal impurity-PVG model and the resistive impurity-PVG model. These models aim to investigate the impact of impurities on key properties of the PVG instability, both in the linear and nonlinear regimes. Our findings show that non-negligible impurity concentrations change the growth rates, wave-number ranges, and nonlinear saturations of these instabilities. Notably, the degree of ionization and the relative impurity flow shear can either amplify or mitigate PVG-related turbulence, depending on the impurity and overall plasma conditions. The results underscore the need for a more comprehensive treatment of multi-ion-species plasmas, particularly when impurity fractions cannot be treated as traces.
AB - The presence of impurity ions in magnetically confined plasmas can significantly influence micro-instabilities, impacting cross-field transport and ultimately affecting fusion performance. In particular, Parallel Velocity Gradient (PVG) instability, commonly observed at the edge of fusion devices and in linear devices, can be strongly influenced by impurities. Inspired by the drift-wave models of Hasegawa-Mima and Hasegawa-Watakani, this article develops and examines two distinct fluid models: the ideal impurity-PVG model and the resistive impurity-PVG model. These models aim to investigate the impact of impurities on key properties of the PVG instability, both in the linear and nonlinear regimes. Our findings show that non-negligible impurity concentrations change the growth rates, wave-number ranges, and nonlinear saturations of these instabilities. Notably, the degree of ionization and the relative impurity flow shear can either amplify or mitigate PVG-related turbulence, depending on the impurity and overall plasma conditions. The results underscore the need for a more comprehensive treatment of multi-ion-species plasmas, particularly when impurity fractions cannot be treated as traces.
KW - drift-wave turbulence
KW - impurities
KW - micro-instabilities
KW - parallel velocity gradient instability
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105010004601
U2 - 10.1088/1361-6587/ade4fb
DO - 10.1088/1361-6587/ade4fb
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105010004601
SN - 0741-3335
VL - 67
JO - Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
JF - Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
IS - 7
M1 - 075019
ER -