<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><metadata xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" xmlns="http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/"><dcterms:title>Access to pedestal pressure relevant to burning plasmas on the high magnetic field tokamak Alcator C-Mod</dcterms:title><dcterms:identifier>https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/0JOUCX</dcterms:identifier><dcterms:creator>J.W. Hughes, P.B. Snyder, M.L. Reinke, B. LaBombard, S. Mordijck, S. Scott, E. Tolman, S.G. Baek, T. Golfinopoulos, R.S. Granetz, M. Greenwald, A.E. Hubbard, E. Marmar, J.E. Rice, A.E. White, D.G. Whyte, T. Wilks, S. Wolfe</dcterms:creator><dcterms:publisher>Harvard Dataverse</dcterms:publisher><dcterms:issued>2018-10-03</dcterms:issued><dcterms:modified>2018-10-03T15:26:13Z</dcterms:modified><dcterms:description>Experiments on the Alcator C-Mod tokamak have utilized reactor-relevant magnetic fields to sustain substantially higher pedestal pressure than in other devices and allow close approach to the ITER H-mode baseline target pedestal pressure of 90 kPa. The EPED model, which couples the physics of transport driven by kinetic ballooning modes and MHD instabilities arising from peeling-ballooning modes, predicts the pressure profile at the onset of edge-localized modes (ELMs), and yields to lowest order a critical-βN like behavior for the pedestal: p∝Bt×Bp ( ∝Bt^2 for fixed edge q). C-Mod routinely accesses edge plasma pressure in excess of 30 kPa, often by using a high-density (ne>3×10^20 m^-3) approach to high confinement, taking advantage of a regime known as enhanced D-alpha (EDA) H-mode. In the EDA H-mode, plasma transport regulates both the pedestal profiles and the core impurity content, thus holding the pedestal stationary at just below the peeling-ballooning stability boundary. This stationary ELM-suppressed regime has approached the maximum pedestal predicted by EPED at these densities: 60 kPa. This in turn gives rise to volume-averaged core plasma pressure in excess of 0.2MPa, a world record value for a magnetic fusion device. Another approach to achieving high pressure utilizes a pedestal limited by current-driven modes at low collisionality, in which pressure increases with density and which allows access to a higher EPED solution, termed “super-H”. C-Mod experiments at reduced density (ne&lt;2×10^20 m^-3) and strong plasma shaping (δ>0.5) accessed this regime, producing pedestals with pressures up to 80kPa (approximately 90% of the ITER target) and temperatures of nearly 2 keV. In a number of these hot H-modes, we observe strong edge instabilities at low toroidal mode number (n=1) when pedestal pressure approaches predicted values from EPED, showing that current-driven MHD modes can serve as a limit on the pedestal in a metal-walled tokamak at high pressure and low collisionality.</dcterms:description><dcterms:subject>Physics</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>Alcator C-Mod</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>confinement</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>h-mode</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>high field</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>pedestal</dcterms:subject><dcterms:date>2018-10-03</dcterms:date><dcterms:rights>This dataset is made available without information on how it can be used. You should communicate with the Contact(s) specified before use.</dcterms:rights></metadata>