1. Introduction
A pellet injected into a high-temperature plasma is immediately ablated due to heat flux from the plasma and forms a high-density plasma called an ablation cloud. From the ablation cloud, many atomic and ionic line emissions are observed. Spectroscopic studies of the emissions may offer information about not only atomic data and possibility of new light sources, but also the ablation mechanism and atomic processes therein, and transport in the main plasma. In the Large Helical Device (LHD), for example, pellets of carbon, aluminum, titanium, tin, tungsten bismuth and so on have been injected to examine the dependence of transport coefficients, the emissivity and peak wavelength on the atomic number [
1,
2,
3], owing to its capability to generate stable high-temperature plasmas.
With an assumption that intensity of line emissions from the ablation cloud is proportional to the ablation rate, trajectory of the pellet or shape of the clouds is deduced from the temporal variation of the emission intensity [
4,
5,
6,
7,
8]. Detailed information about atomic processes taking place in the ablation cloud is necessary for more quantitative understanding of the ablation mechanism. Wideband spectra containing many emission lines have been measured for hydrogen, carbon and aluminum pellets [
9,
10,
11]. From such measurements with intensity ratio analysis of the emission lines, population distribution of excited levels of atoms or ions in the ablation cloud has been investigated and plasma parameters such as electron temperature, neutral atom density and ion density have been estimated. In addition to such wideband measurements, high-resolution spectra of the emission lines have been measured for carbon pellets [
10], and the electron density of the cloud has been estimated from the Stark broadening.
It may be desired to perform both the wideband and high-resolution measurements simultaneously for a single pellet injection because ablation clouds are not necessarily in the same condition, even if similar pellets are injected into similar plasmas. However, it is not easy to perform both types of measurements simultaneously. Moreover, in the case of metal elements, the emission lines are so crowded that it is hard to resolve them with an ordinary low-dispersion spectrometer. In fact, in the spectroscopic study on an aluminum pellet [
11], the number of discretely measured lines and the accuracy of their intensities were limited by the resolution of the spectrometer.
For the purpose of overcoming this problem, we have developed an echelle spectrometer by ourselves and applied it to study an aluminum pellet ablation cloud generated in the LHD [
12]. In this special issue, we report details of the spectrometer and systematic analysis of the Stark broadening coefficient of aluminum ions with the results shown in Reference [
12].
2. Experimental Setup
Figure 1 shows a schematic illustration of the echelle spectrometer developed for the present study and
x-,
y- and
z-axes defined for the explanation. Emission light passed through the entrance slit is reflected by a mirror and collimated by a concave mirror, M
c (focal length: 304.8 mm). The parallel light beam is diffracted in the
z-direction by an echelle grating (Newport, 46.1 grooves mm
−1, 32° blaze) according to their wavelength, but light beams of many diffraction orders overlap each other. These overlapping light beams are spatially separated by a 60° quartz prism in the direction perpendicular to the
z-direction. Finally, separated 30th–58th diffraction light beams are focused on a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera (Andor, DV435-BV, 1024 × 1024 pixels) along the
y-direction by another concave mirror, M
f (focal length: 304.8 mm). A typical two-dimensional image taken by the CCD camera for white light emission from a deuterium lamp is shown in the top of
Figure 1. The CCD is cooled to be −25 °C to reduce thermal noise.
For the purpose of wavelength calibration and resolution estimation, we measure emission lines of a Th-Ar hollow cathode lamp (Heraeus, P858A) [
12] because it has many emission lines in the visible region and the line widths are small enough. The instrumental function of the spectrometer is found to be approximated by a Gaussian profile. We evaluate the instrumental width (full width at the half maximum) by fitting bright Th and Ar lines with a Gaussian function.
Figure 2a shows the evaluated width at the entrance slit width of 25 μm as a function of the wavelength. The curve in the figure is the result of the fit with a third-order polynomial function. We use this fitted curve as the instrumental width at an arbitrary wavelength in the spectral shape analysis explained later. We also calibrate the relative sensitivity of the spectrometer for the whole wavelength region using a tungsten standard lamp with an integrating sphere (Labsphere, USS-600C, North Sutton, NH, USA) [
12]. The result of the sensitivity calibration is shown in
Figure 2b.
The LHD has a torus-shape vacuum vessel with a major radius of about 3.9 m and a minor radius of about 1 m, in which a plasma of about 30 m
3 is confined. The confinement magnetic field is produced by a pair of superconducting helical coils and three pairs of superconducting poloidal coils. The plasma is heated by electron cyclotron heating, ion cyclotron resonance heating and neutral beam injection. For the pellet ablation measurement, we use a pure Al pellet having a cylindrical shape whose diameter and length are 0.8 mm [
12]. The pellet is accelerated in a 6 m long acceleration tube with a pneumatic pipe-gun system, which uses a helium gas of 18 atm pressure, and then injected horizontally into the plasma from an outer port of the LHD (1-O port).
Figure 3 shows a schematic illustration for a part of the equatorial plane of the LHD, in which the pellet trajectory is indicated by a dashed arrow. The travelling speed of the pellet is known to be about 200 ms
−1 from the time-of-flight measurement for a carbon pellet [
10]. The LHD shot number is 104,159, in which the major radius position of the magnetic axis and the field strength are set to be 3.90 m and 2.54 T, respectively [
12].
We place a lens having a focal length of 10 mm and an optical fiber having a core diameter of 1 mm at an observation port close to the pellet acceleration tube. The line of sight is parallel to the injection direction of the pellet, as shown in
Figure 3. Emission from the ablation cloud is focused on one end of the optical fiber by the lens, relayed by several optical fibers having a core diameter of 0.3 mm, and introduced to the entrance slit of the spectrometer. Since the exposure time of the CCD camera is set to be 95 ms, which is much longer than the period of luminous radiation from the ablation cloud of several ms, time-integrated emission during the pellet ablation is measured.
3. Results and Discussion
Figure 4 shows a two-dimensional image taken by the CCD camera for the emission from the aluminum pellet ablation cloud. It is noted that since 8-pixel binning in the
y-direction is done to shorten the readout time of the data, the image consists of 128 × 1024 pixels. We also take a background image when there is no plasma emission.
By subtracting the background from the data shown in
Figure 4, separating the spectra with respect to the diffraction orders, calibrating wavelength and relative sensitivity, and arranging the spectra according to the wavelength, we obtain the spectrum shown in
Figure 5 [
12]. It is noted that the intensity in the figure is in a logarithmic scale.
More than 100 emission lines are resolved, in which more than 50 lines are identified as Al I, Al II, Al III and Al IV lines from available databases [
13,
14]. The identified lines are indicated in
Figure 5 by arrows and listed in
Table 1,
Table 2,
Table 3 and
Table 4. The lines denoted by ‘a–f’ are used to estimate electron density of the ablation cloud from their Stark width, as explained below. Since the LHD plasma contains hydrogen, helium, argon, etc., emission lines of these elements are also seen in
Figure 5.
Many of the observed lines are found to show broadenings, which cannot be reproduced by a Gaussian profile [
12]. The broadenings may be mainly due to Stark broadening having a Lorentzian profile because electron density in the ablation cloud is expected to be high. Furthermore, influence of the Zeeman splitting on the line profile may not be negligible. We fit the observed line profiles as follows: we calculate the splitting and relative emission intensities of the Zeeman components with the method based on the perturbation theory for
, which is approximate magnetic field strength at the location where the radiation intensity of the ablation cloud will take its maximum, and then fit the line profile by a sum of several shifted Voigt functions according to the Zeeman splitting, which have a common Lorentz width,
, and a fixed Gaussian width,
, determined as the instrumental width shown by the curve in
Figure 2a. The adjustable parameters for the fit are
and the area of the spectrum. Examples of the observed spectra and the result of the fit are shown in
Figure 6. In the fit, we use the least square method with weighting the accuracy of the data point in the spectrum estimated from the shot noise of the signal intensity with the dark current noise and the uncertainty of the intensity calibration. It is noted here that the large scatter of the data points in
Figure 6a is due to the low sensitivity of the spectrometer at the wavelength around 395 nm, because the wavelength is not only in the low sensitivity region but also in between the 57th and 58th diffraction orders of the spectrometer (see
Figure 2b). The sensitivity is more than one order of magnitude smaller than those for
Figure 6b,c. Additionally, since the hydrogen, Hε, emission line of 397 nm is detected, we mask the Hε spectrum in the line profile fit. In the spectra shown in
Figure 6b, there are unidentified emission lines in 465.5–466.0 nm, where the spectra are masked for the line profile fit. The possible candidates of the unidentified lines are Fe I 465.64570, 465.75845 and 465.82944 nm, and Fe II 465.6981 nm. On the other hand, since saturation around the emission peaks due to the radiation reabsorption is detected for the Al III 4s(
2S)–4p(
2P) line, as seen in
Figure 6c, we mask the spectra around the emission peaks in the line profile fit.
Emission line intensity is given as the area of the line spectrum. The line intensity,
, from a level
to a level
is proportional to the upper level population,
, as
where
is Planck’s constant.
and
are the frequency of light and the spontaneous transition probability, respectively. Populations of excited levels of atoms and ions in the ablation cloud can be estimated from the observed line intensities with Equation (1) for well-resolved emission lines, enough to evaluate the area of the spectra having available transition probabilities [
13,
14]. The results for neutral aluminum atoms (Al), singly ionized aluminum ions (Al
+) and doubly ionized aluminum ions (Al
2+) are shown in
Figure 7 by the Boltzmann plot against the upper level energy [
12]. It is clear that the population distribution can be fitted with a straight line for each charge state.
It is known that in the case where atoms or ions of an excited level
in a plasma are in the local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE), population of
follows the Saha-Boltzmann distribution:
where
is the electron mass,
is the Boltzmann constant and
,
and
are the population, statistical weight and ionization potential of a level
respectively, of a charge state Al
Z+ [
15].
stands for the ground state, and
and
are the electron density and temperature, respectively. In this case, the upper level populations in the Boltzmann plot are on a straight line and the slope of the line is determined by the electron temperature. From the straight lines fitted to the population distributions shown in
Figure 7, we estimate
of the ablation cloud for Al, Al
+ and Al
2+ plasmas. The estimated
are shown in
Figure 7. Validity of the LTE assumption for these plasmas are discussed later.
Regarding the Lorentz width, the natural broadening determined by the spontaneous transition is negligibly small in comparison with the observed width. Therefore, we treated the observed Lorentz width as the Stark width,
. The Stark width is proportional to the electron density as
where
is the Stark broadening coefficient.
of the Al I 2s
23p(
2P)–3s
24s(
2S) line denoted by ‘a’ in
Figure 5 and
Table 1 has been calculated for several
at
= 10
22 m
−3, as shown in
Figure 8a [
16]. The curve in the figure is the fitted result by an exponential function. From the curve, we determine
of the line at
= 0.49 eV, which is the electron temperature of the Al plasma. Then,
of the Al plasma is estimated from the observed
with the determined
. The result is shown in
Table 5.
A similar analysis can be done for the Al II lines denoted by ‘b’, ‘c’, ‘d’ and ‘e’ in
Figure 5 and
Table 2.
determined in previous calculations and experiments at several
are shown in
Figure 8 [
16,
17,
18]. The curves in the figure are the results of the fit with exponential functions. From the curves, we determine
of the lines at
= 1.51 eV, which is the electron temperature of the Al
+ plasma. Since the experimental data only at
= 0.9 eV is available for the Al II line denoted by ‘c’, we adopt the value of
at
= 0.9 eV as that at
= 1.51 eV, assuming
dependence of
is small in this electron temperature region. The estimated
from these lines are listed in
Table 6 [
12]. It is found that the scatter of the values are within 15% of the average. We adopt the average value as the electron density of the Al
+ plasma.
Regarding Al III lines,
WS of only the line denoted by ‘f’ in
Figure 5 and
Table 3 was measured at
= 4.3 eV and
= 10
24 ~ 10
25 m
−3 [
18], as far as the authors know. With the assumption that the difference of
between
= 4.3 eV and the Al
2+ plasma electron temperature (
= 2.5 eV) is negligibly small, we determine
, and then estimate
of the Al
2+ plasma from the observed
. The result is shown in
Table 7.
In
Table 8, we summarize
and
of the ablation cloud for Al, Al
+ and Al
2+ plasmas [
12]. It is found that
increases while
decreases as an increase in the charge state. This tendency suggests that aluminum in different charge states emits radiation in different regions of the ablation cloud and/or at different times during the ablation. It has been reported, however, that intensity ratios of emission lines of various carbon ions change little during the carbon pellet ablation [
10]. Supposing that the ablation mechanism due to heat flux from the LHD main plasma is the same for carbon and aluminum pellets, we attribute the observed tendency to an inhomogeneous structure of the ablation cloud. The plasma region for neutral atoms is close to the ablating pellet, where
is high and
is low and the region for a higher charge state is farther from the pellet where the cloud is expanding in the LHD main plasma with increasing
and decreasing
.
Here, we discuss the validity of the LTE assumption. It is known that the necessary condition for excited levels of atoms and ions in a plasma to be the LTE is that electron collision processes are dominant and radiative processes can be negligible. The lowest value of the electron density, which realizes such a situation for all levels of an ionization state, is given as McWhirter’s criterion [
19,
20]:
where
is the largest energy gap between two adjacent levels allowed by radiative transition (generally, the energy gap between the ground and first excited states). In Equation (4), the unit of
is eV and those of
and
are K and cm
−3, respectively.
According to Equation (4),
for the Al, Al
+ and Al
2+ plasmas are estimated to be in the orders of 10
21, 10
22 and 10
22 m
−3, respectively. Moreover, it is confirmed that a collisional-radiative model calculation [
21] shows that almost all the excited levels of Al
+ would be in LTE when
is higher than 10
22 m
−3 at
= 1 eV. Since the estimated
of the Al, Al
+ and Al
2+ plasmas from the observed Stark widths are higher than these values, it is consistent for the observed population distributions to obey the Saha-Boltzmann distribution.
From the observed Stark widths with
and
ne estimated above, we determine Stark broadening coefficients of Al II and III lines, the values of which have not been reported. The determined values are listed in
Table 9 and
Table 10 together with the data used for the
estimation. It is demonstrated that the ablation plasma spectroscopy with a simultaneous wideband and high-resolution measurement can be a powerful tool to acquire atomic data, like Stark broadening coefficients.