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 Confirmation of the topology of the Wendelstein 7-X magnetic field to better than 1:100,000
 , S. Lazerson3
 
 
 
 AbstractAbstractFusion  energy research has in the past 40 years focused primarily on the  tokamak concept, but recent advances in plasma theory and computational  power have led to renewed interest in stellarators. The largest and most  sophisticated stellarator in the world, Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X), has  just started operation, with the aim to show that the earlier weaknesses  of this concept have been addressed successfully, and that the  intrinsic advantages of the concept persist, also at plasma parameters  approaching those of a future fusion power plant. Here we show the first  physics results, obtained before plasma operation: that the carefully  tailored topology of nested magnetic surfaces needed for good  confinement is realized, and that the measured deviations are smaller  than one part in 100,000. This is a significant step forward in  stellarator research, since it shows that the complicated and delicate  magnetic topology can be created and verified with the required  accuracy.
 
 IntroductionIntroduction
 Fusion  has the potential to cover the energy needs of the world’s population  into the distant future. Lawson showed in 1957 that magnetic confinement  fusion based on deuterium–tritium fusion can work as a net energy  source if one achieves a sufficiently high triple product,
  ?keV?m-3?s for the plasma, approximately valid for ion temperatures Ti in the range 10–40?keV (ref.  1). 
 Here ni is the ion density, and
  is the energy confinement time, which for a typical operating point in magnetic fusion reactor studies is a few seconds. 
 A promising approach to meeting this challenge is the use of a magnetic field that creates toroidal magnetic surfaces.
 
 Of  these concepts, the tokamak has so far shown the best confinement  properties, but the stellarator is not far behind, and there is reason  to believe that it can catch up. In a stellarator, nested toroidal  magnetic surfaces are created from external magnetic coils, see  Fig. 1.  Each magnetic field line meanders around on its magnetic surface; it  never leaves it. In general, if one follows a field line from one point  on a magnetic surface, one never comes back to the same exact location.  Instead, one covers the surface, coming infinitely close to any point of  the surface.
 
 Figure 1: Layout of W7-X.
 
  Some  representative nested magnetic surfaces are shown in different colours  in this computer-aided design (CAD) rendering, together with a magnetic  field line that lies on the green surface. The coil sets that create the  magnetic surfaces are also shown, planar coils in brown, non-planar  coils in grey. Some coils are left out of the rendering, allowing for a  view of the nested surfaces (left) and a Poincaré section of the shown  surfaces (right). Four out of the five external trim coils are shown in  yellow. The fifth coil, which is not shown, would appear at the front of  the rendering. 
 The stellarator is different  from the other toroidal magnetic surface concepts in that both the  toroidal and the poloidal field components—which together create the  magnetic surface topology—are created from currents in external coils.  In the tokamak and the reversed-field pinch 2,  a strong toroidal current driven within the plasma is needed to  generate the poloidal magnetic-field component. The stellarator’s lack  of a strong current parallel to the magnetic field greatly reduces  macroscopic plasma instabilities, and it eliminates the need for  steady-state current drive. This makes it a more stable configuration,  capable of steady-state operation. These are important advantages for a  power plant.
 
 The stellarator was invented by Lyman Spitzer in the 1950s (ref.  3). So why did it fall behind? And why do some believe that it is about to have a comeback?
 
 Plasma  confinement in early stellarators was disappointing. This was due to  poorly confined particle orbits—many of the particle trajectories were  not fully confined, even though the magnetic field lines were. If each  guiding centre (the point around which the particle performs its rapid  gyration) were to stay exactly on the magnetic field line it starts out  on, the magnetic surfaces would guarantee good confinement. But for all  toroidal magnetic systems, the orbits deviate from the field lines,  since the guiding centres drift perpendicular to the magnetic field.  This is due to the field-line curvature and magnetic field strength  inhomogeneities inherent to the toroidal magnetic topology. In a  magnetically confined fusion plasma, the drift is on the order of 10,000  times slower than the particle velocity, but, at 100?ms-1,  it will lead to particle losses in less than 1/10 of a second, if the  drifts do not average out or stay within the magnetic surface, but  instead carry the particle from the inner to the outer magnetic  surfaces. This was the case in early stellarator experiments. The  tokamak and the reversed-field pinch do not suffer from this problem  since their toroidal symmetry makes the particle drifts average out for  all the particles and therefore only cause minor excursions from the  magnetic surface.
 
 Advances in plasma theory, in particular in the  1980s and 1990s, allowed the development of stellarator magnetic field  configurations that display greatly improved confinement (see refs  4,  5),  reducing the drift orbit losses to a level sufficiently small so that  it is predicted to be compatible with an economically feasible fusion  power plant. The optimization itself, as well as the associated design  of coils that realize the optimized magnetic fields, requires computer  power that only became available in the 1980s. The first generation of  optimized stellarators started operation in the 1990s, and confirmed  many of the expected improvements 6, 7.  These devices were, however, too small to reach the high ion  temperatures where the optimization really comes to its test. Moreover,  they were built with copper coils, which are adequate for  proof-of-principle studies but incompatible with steady-state operation  at high magnetic field strengths. The Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) stellarator  experiment is the first representative of the new generation of  optimized stellarators, and aims to show with its superconducting coil  system and relatively large size (major radius 5.5?m), quasi-steady  state operation with plasma parameters, including ion temperatures,  close to those of a future fusion power plant 8, 9.  The sophisticated computer optimization of W7-X came at a price,  however: the coils have complicated three-dimensional (3D) shapes,  reminiscent of sculptures,  Fig. 1. With today’s 3D design and manufacturing techniques, complex 3D engineering has become feasible, albeit still challenging 10.  Strict requirements for the manufacturing and assembly accuracy of the  coils add to the engineering challenge, which was in fact viewed by some  as unrealistic. High engineering accuracy is needed because small  magnetic field errors can have a large effect on the magnetic surfaces  and the confinement of the plasma.
 
 The measurements that are  presented in the following sections confirm that the engineering  challenges of building and assembling the device, in particular its  coils, with the required accuracy, are met successfully. To explain how  this was done, we first describe a few key concepts.
 
 ResultsResults
 Hamiltonians and magnetic surfacesThe  equations governing magnetic field lines can be written in Hamiltonian  form. It is curious that this simple, but little-known, fact was  discovered only half a century ago 11,  but thanks to it, the entire arsenal of Hamiltonian chaos theory can be  applied to magnetic fields. For instance, the celebrated  Kolmogorov–Arnold–Moser (KAM) theorem 12, 13, 14  guarantees that small perturbations to an otherwise integrable magnetic  field preserve the topology of most field lines, and break it by  generating so-called magnetic islands only at well-defined locations. As  we shall see, these islands can be measured and visualized directly in  W7-X and offer the opportunity to detect field perturbations smaller  than dB/B~10-5. To  our knowledge, it is the first time that the topology of a magnetic  field has been measured so accurately. For more information on the  theory of shaped magnetic fields and their role in plasma confinement,  we refer to two recent reviews 15, 16.
 
 A magnetic surface is not only characterized by its shape and enclosed volume, but also by its rotational transform, ?. This is a measure of the poloidal rotation (‘twist’) of the field lines as one follows them around the magnetic surface; ?=1/2  indicates that the field line moves halfway around a magnetic surfaces  in the poloidal direction for each toroidal turn it makes. Thus, for ?=1/2,  the field line bites itself in the tail after two toroidal transits.  Since there are many more irrational than rational numbers, ? is  typically irrational, and a magnetic field line generally does not close  on itself, it densely traces out a two-dimensional surface.
 
 Measuring the magnetic topologySince  the magnetic surface topology in a stellarator is created entirely from  external coils, it can be measured in the absence of a plasma. This is  done using an electron beam injected along the magnetic field. It  follows and therefore maps out the magnetic field lines, and thus allows  confirmation of the magnetic surface topology, providing a flux surface  map. As mentioned earlier, the motion along the field is much faster  than the guiding-centre drifts. This is even more so for the relatively  low-energy electrons used in magnetic-surface mapping. Owing to the  launch of the electrons parallel to the magnetic field, and the much  smaller mass of electrons relative to any ion, its ratio of parallel  velocity to guiding centre drift velocity is of order 1 million. Thus,  the beam follows the magnetic field lines to a very high accuracy. The  source of the electron beam is an electron gun, a small negatively  biased and heated thermionic electron emitter surrounded by a small  electrically grounded cylindrical structure. This electron beam alone  can visualize the magnetic field line on which it is placed, through  collisional excitation of a dilute background gas inside the vacuum  chamber. This way, striking images can be made of the 3D structure of  the magnetic surfaces; see  Fig. 2 and refs  17,  18.
 
 Figure 2: Experimental visualization of the field line on a magnetic surface.
 
  The  field lines making up a magnetic surface are visualized in a dilute  neutral gas, in this case primarily water vapour and nitrogen (pn˜10-6?mbar). The three bright light spots are overexposed point-like light sources used to calibrate the camera viewing geometry. 
 A  two-dimensional cross-sectional image generally provides clearer  information though, just as Poincaré phase-space maps do for other  Hamiltonian systems. Such a Poincaré plot of the magnetic surface is  realized experimentally by intersecting the electron beam with a rod  covered with a fluorescent, here a special zinc oxide powder (ZnO:Zn).  When the rod intersects the magnetic surface on which the electron beam  circulates, it fluoresces at the one or usually two locations where the  rod intersects the magnetic surface and therefore collides with the  electron beam. As the rod moves through the surface, all points on the  latter will eventually light up. In a long camera exposure of this sweep  motion, the entire cross-section of the magnetic surface appears, as  shown in  Fig. 3.  The motion of the rod itself is often invisible on such an image, since  the light sources (other than the fluorescence) are kept as weak as  possible. After an exposure, one can move the electron gun to another  field line that defines another magnetic surface, and repeat the  process. This way, the nested, closed magnetic surface topology, which  is illustrated in  Fig. 1, can be experimentally verified 19, 20, 21, 22, and if any magnetic island chains exist, they will show up in the Poincaré plot, as explained in the following.
 
 Figure 3: Poincaré section of a magnetic surface.
 
  The  Poincaré section of a closed magnetic surface is measured using the  fluorescent rod technique. The electron beam circulates more than 40  times, that is, over 1?km along the field line. 
 Island chains and error fieldsAn island chain can appear on any magnetic surface with a rational value of ?: a direct confirmation of the small-denominator problem in KAM theory 12. In practice, island chains with a detectable and operation-relevant size only appear for low-order rational values of ?,  and only if there is a Fourier component of the magnetic field that has  matching (that is, resonant) toroidal and poloidal mode numbers, n and m, so that ?=n/m.
 
 W7-X is designed to reach ?=1 at the outermost flux surface. It is a fivefold periodic device, with a pentagon-like shape, and thus has an n=5 Fourier component to its magnetic field, so that an n=m=5  island chain appears at the plasma edge. We denote unwanted field  components error fields, and describe them in relative terms, bmn=Bmn/B0, where B0 is the average magnetic field strength in the confinement region, and Bmn is the amplitude of the Fourier component of the error field. In the search for error fields, we focus on the toroidal n numbers since only n=5 and multiples thereof should be present, whereas a broad spectrum of poloidal m numbers is present in W7-X. The n=1  through 4 components are to be avoided as much as possible, to ensure  symmetric heat load distributions onto the 2 × 5=10 divertor units to be  installed at the vessel wall in future operation phases 23. For the symmetry-breaking n=1 through 4 error fields, deformations due to electromagnetic forces do not play a major role and the bmn’s are largely independent of the magnitude of B0, in contrast to the effects discussed in the ‘Discussion’ section. Of particular concern is the n=1 component, which would create an n/m=1/1 island chain, and would result from, for example, a slightly misplaced coil module.
 
 When  minimizing the error fields, the main engineering challenge is the  geometrical precision during coil manufacturing and coil assembly. The  3.5 × 2.5 × 1.5?m-size non-planar coil winding packs with their five  different geometries (cf.  Fig. 1) are particularly critical 24.  The construction of W7-X required, for the first time, industry to  manufacture superconducting coils with a highly complex shapes, with  tolerances in the ±1?mm regime. This was accomplished by using  specialized winding devices combined with precision metrology 25.
 
 It  was even more challenging to maintain the precision, and keep track of  it, during installation of the coils: Positioning of the coils,  machining of the contact elements, welding of mechanical supports and  bolting to the massive central support ring, all sums up to create an  additional contribution to the error field. It was only possible to keep  deviations during installation and assembly into coil groups under  control by intensive use of laser-based metrology tools, systematic  adjustment procedures, as well as advanced welding and machining  technologies. The largest coil placement errors were less than 4.4?mm,  resulting in an expected largest Fourier coefficient of the magnetic  perturbation error of b11˜1.2 × 10-4 (ref.  26).
 
 Measuring error fieldsMagnetic flux surface mapping, in particular of island chains 27, allows for detailed error field detection and correction 19, 28.  Island chains are sensitive indicators of small changes in the magnetic  field topology, since they are physical manifestations of resonances in  the magnetic topology. The radial full width w of an island chain is related to a resonant magnetic field component through ref.  16
 
 
  The width of an island chain depends on the square root of the resonant field component, Bmn, with ?=n/m, and the magnetic shear dt/dr, as well as the poloidal mode number m and the size of the device (via the major radius R0=5.5?m in W7-X). In W7-X, the rotational transfrom ? is nearly constant from the inner to the outer magnetic surfaces, then d?/dr is small, and a sizeable island chain will result from even a very small resonant error field. 
 With field-line mapping, island chains can be detected, and thus, ? can be determined at a specific radial location, and resonant error fields, if present, can be measured.
 
 We  show in the following that effects due to slight deformations of the  magnetic coils are clearly visible, and that an important error field  component in W7-X has been measured to be less than 1 in 100,000. To our  knowledge, this is an unprecedented accuracy, both in terms of the  as-built engineering of a fusion device, as well as in the measurement  of magnetic topology.
 
 Adjustment of ?The magnetic topology used for initial plasma experiments in W7-X was chosen so as to avoid island chains at the plasma edge 29.
 
 The rotational transform ?  varies from 0.79 in the centre to 0.87 at the outer magnetic surface  that just touches the graphite limiters installed to protect in-vessel  components by intercepting the plasma heat loads.
 
 The ?=5/6˜0.83  resonance is located inside the confinement region—and is thus  unproblematic for the plasma-facing components. It creates a prominent  island chain, because of the built-in n=5 component in W7-X. This island chain is indeed clearly visible, as seen in  Fig. 4 showing a measurement performed at the field strength B=2.5?T  later intended for plasma operation. The island chain location was  detected almost exactly at the position expected from calculations  taking the elastic deformation of the superconducting coils into  account. These deformations, due to the electromagnetic forces between  the magnets, cause a roughly 1% decrease in ?, thus shifting the location of ?=5/6  a few centimetres outward from where they would be without coil  deformation. This was confirmed by repeating the measurements at =0.4?T  and observing that the island chain indeed appears those few centimetres  further inward,  Fig. 5. At B=0.4?T, the electromagnetic forces are (2.5/0.4)2˜39 times smaller than at B=2.5?T.  The actual change in the angle of the magnetic field vector detected in  this way is only about 0.1%. Nevertheless, it shows up in  Fig. 5 as a clearly visible radial shift of the island chain. A more detailed analysis of these data can be found elsewhere 30.
 
 Figure 4: The natural 5/6 island chain.
 
  The  5/6 island chain is visible in a poloidal-radial Poincaré plot created  by an electron gun and a sweep rod, as a set of six ‘bubbles’,  reflecting the m=6 poloidal mode number. A thin background gas in  the chamber creates a visualization of the field lines that create the  x-points of the island chain. 
 Figure 5: Island chain shifts at higher field.
 
  The 5/6 island chain is shown in cyan for B=0.4?T, and in yellow for B=2.5?T.  Although nominally one might expect them to be identical, the 5/6  island chain is about 10?cm further out at high field strength, due to  small deformations of the magnet coils under electromagnetic forces. 
 Evaluation of an important error field componentFor the first measurements of the n=1 error field, a special magnetic surface configuration was used 31, where ? varies slowly and passes through the resonance ?=1/2, see  Fig. 6.
 
 Figure 6: Profile of ? for error field studies.
 
  The ? profile is shown for the special configuration developed for field error detection. The ? varies only minimally around the resonant value of 1/2. The x axis is a measure of the minor radial size (in meters) of the magnetic flux surface, that is, a pseudo-radial coordinate. 
 In the complete absence of error fields, a small n=5, m=10 island chain would appear at the ?=1/2 location at around 25?cm distance from the innermost magnetic surface, but in the presence of even a small n=1 error field, an n=1, m=2 island chain, visible in a Poincaré plot as two ‘bubbles’, will appear.
 
 The B21  error field is too small to create an island structure large enough to  be measured clearly. This is in part due to the good news that it is  small, and in part due to ? being so close to 1/2, that the  electron beam comes very close to its launch position (the electron gun)  after two toroidal transits, thus running the risk of hitting the back  of the electron gun and disappearing.
 
 It is nevertheless possible to indirectly measure the B21 field error, despite this shadowing problem, by adding an n=1 error field with a well-defined amplitude and phase, using the set of five large external coils 32, four of which are shown in yellow in  Fig. 1. The primary purpose of these coils is to trim away the unwanted n=1 error field components, but the trim coils are used here to create an extra n=1 error field, and thus generate an n/m=1/2 island chain wide enough to be measurable.
 
 Light  fibres installed in the vessel along with detailed measurements of  their location allow the pixels of the image plane to be mapped to  physical dimensions. In this way, the width of the island in physical  units can be inferred from a measurement in pixels. Error bars account  for both the physical width of the flux surface traces and the step size  going from outside the island chain to inside it. A best attempt is  made to report the maximum width of the magnetic islands.
 
 By scanning the phase and amplitude of the imposed, well-defined error field, measuring the island phase and width ( Fig. 7), and comparing with equation 1, we find that an n/m=1/2 island with a width of 4?cm must be present, even in the absence of trim-coil induced fields.
 
 Figure 7: Measured island chains for different coil current settings.
 
  For the special ?˜1/2 configuration, the n=1, m=2 island size and phase can be measured by the Poincaré section method. Here two conglomerate images a and b with several nested surfaces are shown for two different phases of a purposely added n=1  field structure with the same amplitude. Although the shadowing problem  leads to gaps, the trained eye can still detect the changes in size and  phase of the m=2 island. 
 The configuration has d?/dr˜0.15?m-1 at the ?=1/2 location, so using equation (1) again, we arrive at B21˜5.4 × 10-6. This value is well within the range that can be corrected with the trim coils 32.  The careful and accurate metrology described earlier in this article is  validated by our flux-surface measurements: The as-built coil forms and  their as-installed locations have been implemented numerically in our  codes, and then used to calculate the size, phase and location of the  intrinsic 1/2 island chain resulting from the B21  component. These data agree very well with our fully independent direct  measurements of the magnetic topology. The agreement regarding amplitude  is shown in  Fig. 8. Good agreement is obtained not only for the amplitude of the island chain but also its phase.
 
 Figure 8: Comparison with metrology-generated numerical model.
 
  The  measured island widths are compared directly with those predicted from  numerical calculations that take the as-built as-installed geometry of  the W7-X coil set into account. Excellent agreement is seen. The offset  from zero in the linear fits indicate the intrinsic 4?cm island width.  If no intrinsic error field were present, the points would have lined up  with the dotted lines. The island widths are determined from the real  or synthetic images by use of an image processing software programme  developed for these purposes. Since it was not always possible to image  the edge of the island chain exactly, and even when so, the electron  beam gives a certain width to an island chain or a magnetic surface, the  island width has some uncertainty. The error bars indicate the largest  and smallest possible island size consistent with the data. 
 DiscussionDiscussion
 The  now experimentally validated numerical model of the coil system allows  us to identify the primary source of the measured error field. The  measured field error is caused primarily by imperfections in the  placement and shapes of the planar coils. For the special magnetic  configuration chosen here, the planar coils produce a much larger  fraction of the magnetic field than they do in configurations used for  plasma operation; in fact the one major configuration that has ?=1 at the plasma edge has no planar coil current. Therefore, we plan to measure the B11 error field in a configuration whose magnetic field is overwhelmingly dominated by the non-planar coils with ?˜1 (ref.  33). Since the B11 and the B21 components should be roughly of the same order of magnitude, and since the B21 error is reproduced by our numerical models, the b11 error is also expected to be small, likely close to or somewhat below the aforementioned estimate of 1.1 × 10-4, thus well within the correction capabilities of the W7-X coil set.
 
 The  need for complex 3D shaping and high-accuracy requirements have been  viewed as major problems for optimized stellarators. Wendelstein 7-X  demonstrates that a large, optimized, superconducting stellarator can be  built with an accuracy sufficient to generate good magnetic surfaces  with the required topology, and that experimental tools exist to verify  the magnetic topology down to and below errors as small as 1:100,000.  These results were obtained using magnetic field-line mapping, a  sensitive technique to measure the detailed topology of the magnetic  surfaces. To reach the other goals of the device, and provide an answer  to the question ‘is the stellarator the right concept for fusion  energy?’, years of plasma physics research is needed. That task has just  started.
 
 Data availabilityThe data  sets generated and/or analysed during the current study are available  from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
 
 Additional informationAdditional information
 How to cite this article: Pedersen, T. S. et al. Confirmation of the topology of the Wendelstein 7-X magnetic field to better than 1:100,000. Nat. Commun. 7, 13493 doi: 10.1038/ncomms13493 (2016).
 
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