1. Introduction
One of the most important phenomena affecting the transport processes in a Tokamak edge is the turbulence affecting the plasma in that region [
1,
2,
3,
4]. This turbulent behavior is due to a number of different physical ingredients [
5,
6,
7], but one of the most relevant contributions is certainly due to the so-called non-linear drift response, as discussed in [
8]; see also the review in reference [
9]. The drift turbulence is a non-linear self-sustained process, which receives a linear triggering in terms of the free energy available to the spectrum development from the background pressure gradient [
10,
11,
12,
13]. However, the non-linear dynamics of the system are then independent of this linear triggering, even because this source of linear instability is significantly suppressed in the presence of magnetic shear [
8].
The theoretical ground of the non-linear drift response is a two-fluid model (electrons and ions), which is justified by the plasma conditions (the low density and the temperature) of the edge plasma and the assumption of low-frequency physics, in which the typical time scale of the turbulent processes is long in comparison to the inverse of the ion gyrofrequency. The original Hasegawa–Wakatani formulation describing the drift turbulence dynamics in [
10,
11] has been based on the effective representation of the Fourier evolution, de facto reducing the problem to a two-dimensional picture [
14,
15,
16,
17]. The limits of this representation and the impact of dealing with a realistic three-dimensional scenario have been discussed in [
18] (for a recent systematic analysis on this aspect, see [
19]).
However, we remark that despite the fact that the simple electrostatic formulation of the turbulence captures many real features of the non-linear dynamics in currently operating systems, nonetheless, as the plasma
-parameter increases enough, a poloidal fluctuation of the magnetic field becomes a relevant subject of the turbulent behavior [
8].
In a recent study [
20], see also [
21], an electrostatic reduced model has been proposed, which leads to a single equation for the electrostatic potential field, as a result of neglecting the linear instability trigger and taking a unique coefficient to describe both the shear viscosity and the particle diffusion; see [
18]. As an important issue, this reduced model was able to predict the attractive character of the two-dimensional axisymmetric configuration with respect to the parallel fluctuations. Since the magnetic field has been taken to be constant and uniform along the axial direction, the obtained picture can be qualitatively associated to the spectral features of the plasma close enough to the X-Point of the magnetic configuration of a Tokamak device.
Here, starting with a rather general picture of the low-frequency turbulence, we then implement a number of motivated simplifications which again lead to a reduced model, characterized by a single equation for the electric field potential. The main difference of the present model with respect to previous ones, having the same scheme, is that here we include the axial potential vector amid fluctuations, which is found to be responsible for a turbulent poloidal magnetic field. Like in previous studies [
20,
22], a constitutive relation links the number density fluctuation to the vorticity field. Moreover, we show that it is possible to evaluate the axial vector potential from the electric field, via one of the basic dynamical equations.
We provide an analytical study, showing the attractivity of the two-dimensional axisymmetric spectrum also in the presence of a turbulent poloidal magnetic field. In fact, we determine a decaying branch of the non-axially symmetric perturbation, as an exact solution of the considered dynamics in the Fourier space. We observe that the obtained decaying behavior has two different characteristic regions of the dispersion relation, associated to a non-zero and zero real frequency, respectively. These two decaying regimes both differ from the corresponding spectral behavior of the pure electrostatic case and, overall, they are not directly connected to the value of the toroidal wave number n: below a given n-dependent wave number, the decaying rate is not affected at all by n itself, while a dependence emerges in the toroidal spectral region above this value (additionally, the dependence is different from the electrostatic case).
This result offers an interesting scenario also for incoming large-size Tokamak machines, like the Italian DTT [
23,
24] or the ITER. In fact, we can conclude that, close enough to the X-point configuration, the turbulence has mainly a two-dimensional spectral feature even when the
-parameter of the plasma is considerably large with respect to the currently operating Tokamak [
5,
6]. We conclude this introduction by discussing some of the approximations underlying our analysis. First of all, we consider a two-fluid low-frequency model to describe the electromagnetic edge turbulence. This approach is reliable in many physical contexts for the Tokamak edge turbulence, since the typical space and time scales of the edge turbulence are typically larger than the ion Larmor radius and the gyro-time, respectively. Clearly, in future fusion devices like the ITER, scenarios can be explored in which gyro-fluid and gyro-kinetic corrections to the turbulence dynamics can be significant [
9]. However, the major impact on the outward heat and particle transport is expected to be driven by the low-frequency non-linear drift response, which is surely one of the basic ingredients to account for the so-called anomalous transport [
1]. Furthermore, we arrive to formulate a reduced model for the electromagnetic turbulence, based on the possibility to neglect the background pressure gradients and the ion axial velocity. Despite this restriction, our non-linear dynamics are able to capture the basic features of the turbulence profile. In fact, as discussed in [
9], it is clearly stated how the intrinsic feature of the edge turbulence is due to the self-sustained (i.e., not supported by the background free energy) non-linear drift response. In other words, in a fully developed turbulence scenario, the presence of the background pressure gradients has a very limited impact on the non-linear fluctuation evolution (for a validation of this statement in the case of the electrostatic turbulence, see [
19]). In this regime, the main source of the turbulence profile is, on the one hand, in the non-linear self-interaction of the electric field, and on the other hand, in the advection of the perturbed pressure and the coupling of both the pressure and the electric field to the axial vector potential [
8]. Also, the toroidal ion velocity can be a regarded as a negligible effect, except for those configurations in which either the external beam injection or a phenomenon of spontaneous rotation are considered. These two effects concern the specific operational conditions of a Tokamak and they should be treated separately with respect to the standard turbulence dynamics we address here.
The manuscript is organized as follows: in
Section 2, we present the hypotheses on which our model of electromagnetic edge turbulence is grounded, deriving the basic dynamical equations and formulating the problem in adimensional variables. In
Section 3, we recast the set of PDE obtained in order to highlight the fact that they represent a generalized version of the Hasegawa–Wakatani model. In
Section 4, we make further assumptions, well-justified in the case of a Tokamak plasma scenario, showing how the system of PDE results is condensed in a single governing equation for the electric potential. Fourier analysis is then performed on this unique equation, outlining the presence of two distinct branches of the dispersion relation. Conclusions are finally drawn in
Section 5.
2. Construction of the Model
We analyze the dynamical and physical properties of the plasma laying in the edge region of a Tokamak machine with particular reference to the magnetic X-point zone, placed out of the separatrix. We consider a quasi-neutral hydrogen-like plasma, in the low-frequency limit (i.e., the phenomenon evolution rates are much smaller than the ion gyrofrequency ), and we provide a two-fluid representation of its dynamics, within the so-called “drift ordering approximation”.
The equilibrium magnetic configuration is here modeled via a constant and uniform magnetic filed. Choosing a set of Cartesian coordinates
(the relative versors are denoted by
,
and
, respectively), the background magnetic field is expressed as
, with
(henceforth, the suffix 0 will denote background quantities). The
z-axis must be thought of as the toroidal axis of a Tokamak device. It is worth noting how the use of Cartesian coordinates still offers a suitable representation of the addressed physical context. In fact, the
z coordinate is here associated with a closed topology, well-reproducing the toroidal profile of a Tokamak device. As implicitly assumed here, the magnetic field curvature is a higher order effect in the turbulent dynamics [
8,
10,
11]. The
x-
y coordinates well describe the poloidal plane since, assuming a purely toroidal magnetic field, we intend our formulation to be well appropriate to the vicinity of a Tokamak X-point only.
In the proposed approximation scheme, and neglecting diamagnetic effects, the electron momentum balance provides for the orthogonal electron velocity
in the following
expression:
where
denotes the electric potential fluctuation (here, we neglect any background contribution). In what follows, the advective (Lagrangian) derivative is constructed with
, namely
in which
f is a generic scalar or vector function. The ion momentum balance provides the dynamical equation for the ion perpendicular velocity
where
e is the elementary charge,
the ion mass and
denotes the constant kinematic (perpendicular) ion viscosity.
If, in agreement with the low-frequency approximation, we set
, where the correction to the
velocity is taken to be small, then Equation (
3) gives, at a first order,
in which the first term in parenthesis corresponds to the so-called polarization drift velocity. We see how, according to the low-frequency approximation adopted for the dynamics, the polarization drift velocity is a small correction to the
velocity, just because the typical turbulence frequency is much smaller than
.
The charge conservation equation
can be easily restated by observing that
, where we indicate with
the electron and ion background density. Hence, we get the following equation:
where
denotes the background Alfvén velocity. We remark that, having chosen the background magnetic field to be aligned with the
z axis, the parallel component of the gradient coincides with
, whereas
, hence
. It is worth noting that the electric field dynamics are not affected by the electron and ion diamagnetic velocities which, for a constant magnetic field, turn out to be divergenceless.
In what follows, we assume a background pressure profile depending on the coordinate of
x only and such that
, where
is a fixed spatial length. In other words, we consider an exponential behavior of the background pressure, which would require, for a precise force balance, an additional dependence of the magnetic field
z-component of the form
, which will be neglected in what follows since, in a Tokamak, the plasma
-parameter is rather small. If we denote by
the pressure contrast (the fluctuation value to the background one, i.e.,
), it obeys the following equation (the same for ions and electrons):
is the ion parallel fluctuating velocity. The equation governing the dynamics of
reads
where
is the background temperature common to ions and electrons, linked to the background pressure via
, with
as the Boltzmann constant. If we denote the perturbation of the parallel magnetic vector potential as
, then we easily get from the Ampere law (displacement currents are negligible in a non-relativistic plasma) the relation of
connecting the parallel current to the turbulent fluctuating magnetic field. The system describing the perturbation dynamics is completed by the generalized Ohm law, taking the explicit form of
where
denotes the electric parallel conductivity, with
as the electron mass and
as the electron–ion collision frequency. We conclude the construction of this dynamical scenario by stressing the relations between the electric field components and the potentials, i.e.,
and
.
We now aim to formulate the dynamical system, derived above, by means of dimensionless quantities. To this end, we introduce new space and time coordinates as , , and . Here, L and R are two spatial scales (we assume ) characterizing the poloidal plane and the toroidal direction, respectively. Analogously, we define the new set of dynamical variables as , and . The fourth unknown is dimensionless by definition. We also introduce .
In terms of this set of redefined coordinates and variables, Equations (
5)–(
7) and (
9) take the explicit form:
where we introduced the dimensionless version of the constants characterizing the physical features of our model as
The standard symbol
indicates the Debye length, and we observe that
, being that
is the ion Larmor radius normalized with the poloidal length scale, i.e.,
.
Finally, we also adopted the compact notation of
where
f is a generic scalar function of the spatial coordinates
. The system above corresponds to a closed set of partial differential equations in the four unknowns,
,
,
U and
, which, once assigned suitable initial and boundary conditions (see below), provides a description of the plasma turbulent dynamics.
3. Generalized Hasegawa–Wakatani Model
In this section, we show that the set of dynamical equations derived above is equivalent to a generalized Hasegawa–Wakatani model. Indeed, by expressing the quantity
, i.e., the current density, from Equation (
13) into Equations (
10) and (
11), we get the following two restated equations
where we redefined the coupling constants of our model as
In Equation (
19), we added a diffusion term (
being a constant diffusion coefficient) to account for different transport regimes in a Tokamak edge plasma.
It is worth noting that, in our scheme, the kinetic viscosity
and the electron–ion collision frequency
are constants, independent of the spatial point and the instant of time considered. Hence, the parameters
,
,
and
are mere positive real numbers and the set (
12), (
18) and (
19) is a system of PDE with constant coefficients. The same does not hold for Equation (
13): indeed, in this case, an explicit dependence on the specific point considered is present, due to the background density
appearing in the definition of the parallel conductivity
. In order to deal with a system of PDE with constant coefficients, one can approximate the number density
(
denoting the X-point number density) with its mean value on the interval
, resulting in
.
Now, as the fourth equation for the four unknowns,
,
,
U and
, instead of Equation (
13), we consider Equation (
10), which we recast as
We observe that, in the linearized inviscid case, the equation above would correspond to the Lorentz gauge condition, as restricted to the present symmetry.
4. Relevant Reduced Model
We now focus our attention on a reduced model, described by a single equation for the electric potential. To this end, we neglect, in the system (
18), (
19) and (
12), two quantities that are usually small in many turbulence configurations of a Tokamak, i.e., the gradient of the background pressure
(responsible for a linear instability) and the presence of the velocity
U in the problem. Hence, we take the limit
in Equations (
18) and (
19) and we neglect Equation (
12). From a physical point of view, taking the limit
, we are simply stating that the typical scale of the background pressure variation is much larger than the corresponding spatial scale of the turbulent dynamics. It is just in this situation that we can neglect the background pressure gradients in comparison to the fluctuating pressure fluctuations. Under these assumptions, Equation (
19) is rewritten as
If we now set
, we notice that Equations (
18) and (
23) result identicalyl, provided the constitutive relation of
to be implemented. Inserting (
24) into the equation for the electric potential (
18) yields
with
. In this way we reduced the dynamical system composed by Equations (
12), (
18), (
19) and (
22) to a set of two coupled Equations (
22) and (
25), equipped with the supplemental constitutive relation (
24). Now, if we apply to Equation (
25) the operator
and we make use of Equation (
22), we obtain a single equation characterizing our model, in which the only unknown is the electric potential, namely
We remark that the terms times vanish for the axisymmetric component of the theory, due to the fact that they represent derivatives along the toroidal direction of the vector potential.
We are now interested in analyzing the properties of Equation (
26). To this end, we exploit the periodicity of the system on the coordinate
w and we express the electric potential through a Fourier series along the toroidal direction. The poloidal plane coordinates
will be treated instead with a Fourier transform, in order to obtain
where
. The region
D is an annulus of major radius
, corresponding to the cut-off value of the drift-fluid approximation here addressed. The local character of our analysis also implies a lower-bound
for the poloidal wavenumber, connected to the size of the region in which the assumptions we made, for instance, a purely toroidal magnetic field, result validly.
Substituting into Equation (
26), we get the following basic equation for the Fourier modes
where
and
is the norm of the poloidal wavenumber. It is easy to verify that the
mode satisfies
In the inviscid limit (
), the equation above is characterized by a statistical equilibrium [
21,
25], corresponding to an energy spectrum of the form
where the parameters
and
represent two inverse temperatures, associated with the energy and enstrophy constants of motion, respectively.
As in [
21], we now concentrate our attention on the case in which
can be neglected in the energy spectrum (
30) (this choice is linked to a specific structure of the system initialization), for which we deal with a constant enstrophy isotropic spectrum. The corresponding mode amplitude results in
where
is a complex constant. It is easy to verify that the field form (
31) is a steady solution of Equation (
29) in the inviscid case
(for details, see
Appendix A). Clearly, it remains a good approximate solution also for the viscous case, when
, and this regime remains valid for a significant part of the inertial region spectrum. It is worth noting that the steady spectrum above is a mean value of the field Fourier strength, around which the fluctuations evolve. From a practical point of view, this can be determined via a numerical analysis of the Fourier dynamic representation, by looking at a well-developed turbulence regime and averaging the field fluctuations on a given time interval (ideally the smallest possible) over which the emerging average is really steady; see the studies in [
20,
21,
22].
We now linearize Equation (
28) in the generic
mode, when considering the steady solution (
31) as the dominant contribution, namely,
By assuming isotropy in the poloidal plane, i.e.,
, we see that the term containing the integral identically vanishes (details in
Appendix A) and the dynamical equation for the Fourier modes
results in
We are interested in analyzing the dispersion relation and the damping rate for these modes; hence, we search for a solution to the above equation in the form of
(with
being a constant and
a complex number), obtaining
We explicitly denote the real and imaginary part of
as
and
, respectively, i.e.,
(with
and
being real functions of
k). Then, Equation (
34) splits into the following system
It is immediately noticeable that (
36) is satisfied either for
or
. Inserting the
solution in (
35) yields
where the symbol ± identifies two distinct solutions, corresponding to the choice of either the plus or the minus sign in the right-handed side of the above equation. The solution denoted by a plus (minus) corresponds to a slow (fast) damping rate and the separation between the two regimes is depicted by the orange and green curves in
Figure 1. The reality of both
is ensured by
We remark that, when (
38) is satisfied, both
are real negative numbers and the corresponding solution describes damped oscillations rather than wave-like fluctuations.
Conversely, by selecting the second solution of (
36), i.e.,
, and solving (
35) for the angular frequency
, we obtain
and in this case, the reality condition on
is satisfied for
. It is interesting to compute the group velocity for these wave-like solutions, which reads
We outline that the group velocity has the opposite sign with respect to the phase velocity
when
whereas both velocities share the same sign in the opposite case
. Lastly, for
, we deal with a wave-like solution characterized by a null group velocity, i.e., no energy transport is allowed in this regime. It must be stressed that
is always smaller than
; therefore, for any given
, one can always select a wavenumber
k such that the wave-like solutions associated with
have concordant, discordant or null group velocity. In order to provide some quantitative examples of the phenomenology here described, let us assume typical values of a Tokamak-like environment [
19,
23,
24] for the physical parameters characterizing our model: specifically, we set
eV,
T and
[
23]; thus,
and
cm. Moreover, we select for the length scales
L and
R values equal to 1 cm and 1300 cm, respectively. We report, in
Figure 2, the different regimes for the solutions of (
34) described above, highlighting the fact that either a pure damped oscillatory fluctuation or wave-like decaying propagating ripples are present, depending on the specific choice of the toroidal an poloidal wavenumbers considered. For instance, the axisymmetric
solution admits solely a pure damped oscillatory regime; for
, all three regimes (either oscillatory or wave-like with concordant or discordant velocities) are feasible and the specific configuration depends on the poloidal wavenumber
k; for
n equal to 4 and 5, only the wave-like solutions are allowed, whereas for
, the system has a unique solution, corresponding to the wave-like case with concordant velocities.
In
Figure 1 we show the behavior of the damping coefficients as functions of the poloidal wavenumber
k, outlining again the transition between wave-like and oscillatory regimes marked by the threshold wavenumber
. We can observe that, for growing values of
n, the latter moves towards larger values of
k.
5. Concluding Remarks
We developed a low-frequency formulation for the two-fluid turbulence in the edge region of a Tokamak plasma, whose magnetic configuration was associated with a constant and uniform axial magnetic field, i.e., well-representing a region very close to the X-point [
26].
Then, under suitable assumptions, based on the standard operational regimes of medium-size and incoming experiments, we reduced the dynamics to a simplified model: actually, we deal with a single equation for the electric potential field, a constitutive relation giving the pressure fluctuations and an evolutionary link between the scalar (electric) and vector (de facto the axial component) potentials.
In order to better focus on the physical characteristics of these assumptions, we recall that they can be summarized in the following three statements: (i) the background pressure gradients are negligible; (ii) the ion axial velocity can be neglected with respect to the corresponding contribution for electrons; and (iii) the shear viscosity and particle diffusion coefficients are taken to be comparable. The first assumption is justified by the fact that the background pressure gradient, in a realistic Tokamak configuration, is naturally suppressed by means of magnetic shear [
9]. The second hypothesis provides a good representation of the Tokamak typical plasmas in the absence of spontaneous rotation [
27] or of neutral beam injection. Finally, the possibility to take the viscosity and diffusivity coefficients of the same order has been considered in various formulations, see, for instance, [
18], and this is due to the role that the higher-order Laplacian operators take in the edge turbulence picture. In fact, the value of these coefficients is relevant in stabilizing the numerical simulation and, de facto, their amplitude cannot be predicted a priori, simply because it is directly and significantly influenced by the turbulence features. Thus, the value of the dissipation coefficients has a natural phenomenological impact and different regimes can be investigated.
The main result of the present analysis is to recognize that, also in the presence of a fluctuating poloidal magnetic field, the 3D-turbulence picture, i.e., in which non-axially symmetric modes are present, has a natural branch of the non-linear dynamics along which it decays toward a two-dimensional profile. This result generalizes the study in [
20], concerning the electrostatic turbulence only. Although the attractive nature of the axially symmetric turbulence emerges in both cases, here, we found a different morphology of the decaying rate: while in the electrostatic scenario, the growth rate depends on
and a single branch is present, here, this same quantity is associated with dissipation coefficients, but, below a given wavenumber, it is independent of the toroidal index
n. Furthermore, a second branch emerged for wavenumbers above the threshold provided by the parameter
introduced in this work, and in this case, a dependence on the axial number
n is restored. However, it is important to remark that no peculiar limit exists to recover the pure electrostatic case from the electromagnetic analysis. It is merely this fact that clarifies the relevance of dealing with a fluctuating poloidal magnetic field, since it is able to induce, especially for high values of the
-parameter of the plasma, a specific fingerprint on the turbulent dynamics as a whole. The present theoretical construction could be validated by a numerical investigation of the considered non-linear dynamics. The comparison of the general picture discussed in
Section 2, with the reduced model proposed in
Section 4, could make the quantitative conditions under which our model becomes fully predictive more precise, and this perspective could be the subject of a natural follow-up to this study. Anyway, for what concerns the decaying behavior of the 3D turbulence towards a 2D axially symmetric scenario, we can be confident that the situation is very similar to the investigation performed in [
20] on the electrostatic turbulence. In other words, in correspondence with that result (which is contained in the present scenario), we are lead to argue that the decaying branch we identified here has a rather general character. Also, in the electromagnetic turbulence, the axially symmetric fluctuations significantly attract the nonlinear 3D dynamics and the mode correspondent to
turns out to be the most energetic one.