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Instabilities, anomalous transport, and nonlinear structures in partially and fully magnetized plasmas.

Date

2018-03-01

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Type

Thesis

Degree Level

Doctoral

Abstract

Plasmas behavior, to a large extent, is determined by collective phenomena such as waves. Wave excitation, turbulence, and formation of quasi-coherent nonlinear structures are defining features of nonlinear multi-scale plasma dynamics. In this thesis, instabilities, anomalous transport, and structures in partially and fully magnetized plasmas were studied with a combination of analytical and numerical tools. The phenomena studied in this thesis are of interest for many applications, e.g., plasma reactors for material processing, electric propulsion, magnetic plasma confinement, and space plasma physics. Large equilibrium flows of ions and electrons exist in many devices with partially magnetized plasmas in crossed electric and magnetic fields. Such flows result in various instabilities and turbulence that produce anomalous electron transport across the magnetic field. We present first principle, self-consistent, nonlinear fluid simulations that predict the level of anomalous current generally consistent with experimental data. We also show that drift waves in partially magnetized plasmas (which we called Hall drift waves), destabilized by the electron drift along with density gradients, tend to form (via inverse energy cascade) shear flows similar to zonal flows in fully magnetized plasmas. These flows become unstable due to a secondary instability (similar to Kelvin–Helmholtz instability) and produce large-scale quasi-stationary vortices. Then, it was shown that in nonlinear regimes, the axial mode instability due to electron and ion flows (along the electric field) forms large-amplitude cnoidal type waves. At the same time, the strong electric field produced by axial modes affects Hall drift waves stability and provides a feedback mechanism on density gradient driven turbulence, creating a complex picture of interacting anomalous transport, zonal flows, vortices, and streamers. In the case where axial modes are destabilized by boundary effects, the nonlinear dynamics result in a new nonlinear equilibrium or standing oscillating waves. The formation of shear flows (zonal flows) was also studied in the framework of the Hasegawa-Mima equation and it was established that zonal flows can saturate due to nonlinear self-interactions. Lastly, a novel approach for high-fidelity numerical simulations of multi-scale nonlinear plasma dynamics is developed which is illustrated with the example of an unmagnetized plasma.

Description

Keywords

plasma instabilities, nonlinear waves, anomalous transport

Citation

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)

Department

Physics and Engineering Physics

Program

Physics

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