Alcator C-Mod Weekly Highlights June 29, 1998 Engineering: Very good progress is being made on the TF refurbishment. The upper TF core cleanup has been completed and the core is now ready for plating and electroforming. All TF arms, both upper and lower, have completed the cleanup process and are being inspected in preparation for plating. The plating activity will be started early this week. Silver plating samples have successfully completed cooldown cycle tests to LN2 temperatures, and vacuum bakes and UT tests to reveal any voids between the copper and plating surface. The inductive heating process has produced very good temperature distributions and full scale soldering tests have begun. Careful adjustments of the inductive heating power and cycle time, and modifications to the heat sink were required to achieve these results. We have assumed in the past that measurement of the gap between TF fingers was an adequate measure of feltmetal pad pressure. New diagnostics are being developed to directly measure this pressure during machine reassembly. In a related effort, we are looking at better designs and materials to be used in making the spring plates that apply the pressure to the pads. We have continued to work on the control system for FMIT#3 and #4. We are waiting for parts to finish the repair job on #4's input cavity. One of the two EIMAC tubes which have been used in FMIT#4 has been sent back to the company for repair. The tube holds DC voltage but breaks down with application of RF power. We continued to make progress toward the initial conditioning of the DNB plasma source. The Arc/Filament/Snubber interface chassis which links the supplies with the master control logic and the PLC was successfully tested. Remote control and monitoring of the primary power for the Arc/Filament/Snubber supplies was tested. After correction of a problem in the monitoring instrumentation, and tests of the power and control phasing, we will begin pulsing the arc and filament supplies into the dummy loads. The dummy loads for the Arc/Filament/Snubber power supplies were installed last week. Physics: We have experimental evidence of the formation of an internal transport barrier during off-axis D(H) minority heating. The primary evidence is a ~2.5-fold increase in neutron rate over the H-mode only phase with an associated 25% increase in central density. Analysis of the x-ray brightness profile also indicates a central peaking (amplitude increase by 50% and the profile width decreases by 50%). In addition, the radiation profile suggests both a core and edge barrier. As the barrier forms, the sawtooth amplitude decreases and the sawteeth are eventually completely stabilized. This behavior is reminiscent of PEP-mode, but without pellet injection. Preliminary analysis suggests the core barrier is formed following strong Elmy phases (the neutron rate increases following two Elm bursts and a dithering L-mode phase) and the radiated power profile also suggests a growing core barrier. The mode is terminated by MHD activity. RF sheaths have been detected on magnetic field lines connecting the D-port RF antenna and the AB limiter. The RF voltage driving the sheaths is deduced from the decrement during RF to the floating potential measured by a Langmuir probe on an antenna side protection tile, and found to be of the order of 100V. Using the ion saturation current density profile measured by the A-port scanning probe, it is found that on order of 1% of the net RF power is lost to acceleration of ions into the antenna and limiter by the RF sheath voltage. The 1998 Alcator C-Mod Ideas Forum is being planned for August 19-20, 1998. The forum, to be held at MIT, will consist of short (five minute) presentations proposing experiments to be carried out on Alcator C-Mod during the next run campaign. Details concerning the forum will be posted on the C-Mod Web page (www.pfc.mit.edu/cmod/) shortly, or can be obtained by contacting Steve Wolfe at wolfe@psfc.mit.edu. Travel and Visits: Dr. Gary Hallock from U. of Texas visited last week to discuss PCI (phase contrast interferometry) diagnostic upgrades and the fluctuation data collected thus far by Alex Mazurenko. We agreed that there are two possible modes of operation for the system: heterodyne RF mode and plasma fluctuations mode. The former is the primary objective for the upcoming campaign because of its potential in providing long sought after core RF wave information. The fluctuation data can be taken when the diagnostic is not in use specifically for the RF. Until we have a fuller complement of diagnostics to help determine where the fluctuations are located, interpretation of the results will be difficult. We will be adapting amplifiers built for the TEXT-U PCI system for the planned upgrade to 32 channels at C-Mod. We expect to have 12 amplifiers and spares ready by the fall for the upcoming campaign. Dr. Hallock also provided some important insights concerning the existing data and established an initial direction for us to proceed. This appears to be a very interesting research development. Gary Taylor of PPPL visited to work on the 19 channel GPC2 instrument. Modifications to CAMAC modules were made and tested. Progress was also made on analysis of data from the last campaign. Calibrated temperatures and radii are now available in the MDSPlus tree for selected shots.