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91探花
Theoretical physicists working at a blackboard collaboration pod in the Beecroft building.
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Professor Felix Parra Diaz

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Research theme

  • Plasma physics

Sub department

  • Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics
felix.parradiaz@physics.ox.ac.uk
Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics
  • About
  • Publications

Modification of ion-temperature-gradient turbulence by impurities in stellarator plasmas

Nuclear Fusion IOP Publishing 66:4 (2026) 046031

Authors:

Iv谩n Calvo, F茅lix I Parra, Hanne Thienpondt, Jos茅 Manuel Garc铆a-Rega帽a

Abstract:

Recent nonlinear gyrokinetic simulations have shown that impurities can strongly modify the turbulent heat flux in stellarator plasmas. Here, the ion-temperature-gradient (ITG) dispersion relation in a plasma containing impurities is analytically solved in certain limits and an expression for the modification of the ITG growth rate by impurities is derived. The analytical expression is the sum of three terms corresponding to three different physical causes (impurity density gradient, impurity temperature gradient and dilution) of the change in the growth rate. The scalings predicted analytically for the modification of the growth rate are shown to be reproduced by linear gyrokinetic simulations. The conditions for reduction or increase of the ITG growth by impurities are also correctly predicted by the analytical solution to the dispersion relation. Finally, a remarkable correlation is found between the analytical expression for the modification of the growth rate and the modification of the turbulent heat flux obtained from nonlinear gyrokinetic simulations.

Saturation of magnetized plasma turbulence by propagating zonal flows

Physical Review Research American Physical Society (APS) 8:1 (2026) 013295

Authors:

R Nies, F Parra, M Barnes, N Mandell, W Dorland

Abstract:

Strongly driven ion-scale turbulence in tokamak plasmas is shown to be regulated by a new propagating zonal flow mode, the toroidal secondary mode, which is nonlinearly 91探花ed by the turbulence. The mode grows and propagates due to the combined effects of zonal flow shearing and advection by the magnetic drift. Above a threshold in the turbulence level, small-scale toroidal secondary modes become unstable and shear apart turbulent eddies, forcing the turbulence level to remain near the threshold. This threshold condition is used to derive scaling laws for the turbulent heat flux, fluctuation spectra, and zonal flow amplitude, which are validated in nonlinear gyrokinetic simulations and explain previous experimental observations.

Conceptual study on using Doppler backscattering to measure magnetic pitch angle in tokamak plasmas

Nuclear Fusion IOP Publishing 66:1 (2025) 016052

Authors:

AK Yeoh, VH Hall-Chen, QT Pratt, BS Victor, J Damba, TL Rhodes, NA Crocker, KR Fong, JC Hillesheim, FI Parra, J Ruiz Ruiz

Abstract:

We introduce a new approach to measure the magnetic pitch angle profile in tokamak plasmas with Doppler backscattering (DBS), a technique traditionally used for measuring flows and density fluctuations. The DBS signal is maximised when its probe beam鈥檚 wavevector is perpendicular to the magnetic field at the cutoff location, independent of the density fluctuations (Hillesheim et al 2015 Nucl. Fusion 55 073024). Hence, if one could isolate this effect, DBS would then yield information about the magnetic pitch angle. By varying the toroidal launch angle, the DBS beam reaches cutoff with different angles with respect to the magnetic field, but with other properties remaining similar. Hence, the toroidal launch angle which gives maximum backscattered power is thus that which is matched to the pitch angle at the cutoff location, enabling inference of the magnetic pitch angle. We performed systematic scans of the DBS toroidal launch angle for repeated DIII-D tokamak discharges. Experimental DBS data from this scan were analysed and combined with Gaussian beam-tracing simulations using the Scotty code (Hall-Chen et al 2022 Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 64 095002). The pitch-angle inferred from DBS is consistent with that from magnetics-only and motional-Stark-effect-constrained (MSE) equilibrium reconstruction in the edge. In the core, the pitch angles from DBS and magnetics-only reconstructions differ by one to two degrees, while simultaneous MSE measurements were not available. The uncertainty in these measurements was under a degree; we show that this uncertainty is primarily due to the error in toroidal steering, the number of toroidally separated measurements, and shot-to-shot repeatability. We find that the error of pitch-angle measurements can be reduced by optimising the poloidal launch angle and initial beam properties. Since DBS has high spatial and temporal resolutions, is non-perturbative, does not require neutral beams, and is likely robust to neutron damage of and debris on the first mirrors, using DBS to measure the pitch angle in future fusion energy systems is especially appealing.

Centrifugal-mirror confinement with strong azimuthal magnetic field

Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion IOP Publishing 67:9 (2025) 095025

Authors:

T Stoltzfus-Dueck, FI Parra

Abstract:

One practical challenge for the centrifugal-mirror confinement concept is the large radial voltage necessary to drive supersonic azimuthal rotation. In principle, the addition of a strong azimuthal field could reduce the required voltage, since the simple azimuthal E脳B drift would be replaced by more rapid azimuthal trapped-particle precession. Also, if the mirror ratio is large enough, newly ionized ions are accelerated to the necessary parallel velocities in their first bounce orbit, both confining and significantly heating them. Unfortunately, MHD analysis shows that the centrifugal-force-confining plasma current is purely azimuthal. This implies that only the axial magnetic field contributes to the confining magnetic pressure, severely limiting the usefulness of the azimuthal magnetic field in a beta-limited plasma scenario.

Piecewise omnigenous stellarators with zero bootstrap current

Physical Review E American Physical Society (APS) 112:2 (2025) l023201

Authors:

Iv谩n Calvo, Jos茅 Luis Velasco, Per Helander, F茅lix I Parra

Abstract:

Until now, quasi-isodynamic magnetic fields have been the only known stellarator configurations that, at low collisionality, give small radial neoclassical transport and zero bootstrap current for arbitrary plasma profiles, the latter facilitating control of the magnetic configuration. The recently introduced notion of piecewise omnigenous fields has enormously broadened the space of stellarator configurations with small radial neoclassical transport. In this Letter, the existence of piecewise omnigenous fields that give zero bootstrap current is proven analytically and confirmed numerically. These results establish piecewise omnigenity as an alternative approach to stellarator reactor design.

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