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Drift orbits and neoclassical transfort in the H-1NF heliac

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Dettrick, Sean Alexander

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This thesis is concerned with neoclassical transport in the H-1NF heliac, and contains an examination of drift-orbit geometries, a description of a neoclassical Monte Carlo transport code, and a description of a method to use that code to self-consistently calculate ambipolar radial electric fields. We set out to study the contributions to neoclassical transport in H-1NF, by first describing the topology and the abundance of collisionless, trapped particle orbits in the presence of radial electric fields. We give an overview of the trapped orbit geometries in H-1NF, and develop a method to numerically classify the trapped particle orbits. On average, the trapped particle fraction in H-1NF is 40%, with approximately 5%, 15%, and 20% of the orbits in the deeply trapped, helically trapped, and toroidally trapped states, respectively. A condensed version of this component of the thesis has been submitted to Nuclear Fusion. The orbit studies provide a background for the development of a neoclassical Monte Carlo transport code, MCMuPPeT (for Monte Carlo, Multi Processing Plasma Transport). Using the code, we compare several Monte Carlo transport diagnostics, taken from the literature. Confinement times and diffusion coefficients are calculated for plasma conditions which will be achievable in H-1NF after the National Facility upgrade. Since the electric field can dominate in the determination of the transport, we develop an iterative method to self-consistently calculate the ambipolar radial electric field, using the Monte Carlo code. The method is applied to the Argon plasma conditions observed in H-1NF, in the experimentally observed Improved Conhnement Mode (ICM). To help interpret the results, the ambipolar electric fields were calculated in the same conditions using a well-known analytic model which was geometrically-fitted to H-1NF for our purposes. Qualitative agreement was found between both of the neoclassical models and the experimental results; the electric fields predicted in the ICM conditions are typically twice as large as those predicted in the conditions before the transition. The two models were also used to look for the neoclassically predicted transition from negative to positive radial electric field. Positive radial electric fields were observed, at long mean free path, in Hydrogen plasma conditions which will be achievable in H-1NF after the National Facility upgrade. We have also developed methods to optimise the Monte Carlo code for both parallel and vector computing environments. Two Message Passing algorithms that we use to parallelise the MC code are presented in the appendix.

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