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Probe Diagnostics for Fusion Devices

Guido Van Oost

Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 49 / Number 2T / February 2006 / Pages 357-366

Technical Paper / Plasma and Fusion Energy Physics - Diagnostics / dx.doi.org/10.13182/FST06-A1135

During the last decade it became increasingly clear that boundary plasmas play a major role in magnetic fusion experiments, and strongly relate to and even dominate central plasma processes. On the one hand, the conditions of the boundary plasma are crucial to obtain high fusion triple products; on the other hand, plasma-surface interactions, a sufficiently low impurity concentration in the fusion volume, heat removal and helium exhaust which directly relate to the boundary plasma, have emerged as equally important goals, and even more difficult to reach in the state of self-sustained thermonuclear burn. Successful resolution of these issues is critical to establish the viability of the tokamak confinement concept as a fusion power reactor.