Overview of first Wendelstein 7-X high-performance operation

The optimized superconducting stellarator device Wendelstein 7-X (with major radius , minor radius , and plasma volume) restarted operation after the assembly of a graphite heat shield and 10 inertially cooled island divertor modules. This paper reports on the results from the first high-performance plasma operation. Glow discharge conditioning and ECRH conditioning discharges in helium turned out to be important for density and edge radiation control. Plasma densities of with central electron temperatures were routinely achieved with hydrogen gas fueling, frequently terminated by a radiative collapse. In a first stage, plasma densities up to were reached with hydrogen pellet injection and helium gas fueling. Here, the ions are indirectly heated, and at a central density of a temperature of with was transiently accomplished, which corresponds to with a peak diamagnetic energy of and volume-averaged normalized plasma pressure . The routine access to high plasma densities was opened with boronization of the first wall. After boronization, the oxygen impurity content was reduced by a factor of 10, the carbon impurity content by a factor of 5. The reduced (edge) plasma radiation level gives routinely access to higher densities without radiation collapse, e.g. well above line integrated density and central temperatures at moderate ECRH power. Both X2 and O2 mode ECRH schemes were successfully applied. Core turbulence was measured with a phase contrast imaging diagnostic and suppression of turbulence during pellet injection was observed.

The optimized superconducting stellarator device Wendelstein 7-X (with major radius R = 5.5 m, minor radius a = 0.5 m, and 30 m 3 plasma volume) restarted operation after the assembly of a graphite heat shield and 10 inertially cooled island divertor modules. This paper reports on the results from the first high-performance plasma operation. Glow discharge conditioning and ECRH conditioning discharges in helium turned out to be important for density and edge radiation control. Plasma densities of 1-4.5 × 10 19 m −3 with central electron temperatures 5-10 keV were routinely achieved with hydrogen gas fueling, frequently terminated by a radiative collapse. In a first stage, plasma densities up to 1.4 × 10 20 m −3 were reached with hydrogen pellet injection and helium gas fueling. Here, the ions are indirectly heated, and at a central density of 8 · 10 19 m −3 a temperature of 3.4 keV with T e /T i = 1 was transiently accomplished, which corresponds to nT i (0)τ E = 6.4 × 10 19 keV s m −3 with a peak diamagnetic energy of 1.1 MJ and volume-averaged normalized plasma pressure β = 1.2%. The routine access to high plasma densities was opened with boronization of the first wall. After boronization, the oxygen impurity content was reduced by a factor of 10, the carbon impurity content by a factor of 5. The reduced (edge) plasma radiation level gives routinely access to higher densities without radiation collapse, e.g. well above 1 × 10 20 m −2 line integrated density and T e = T i = 2 keV central temperatures at moderate ECRH power. Both X2 and O2 mode ECRH schemes were successfully applied. Core turbulence was measured with a phase contrast imaging diagnostic and suppression of turbulence during pellet injection was observed.
Keywords: stellarator, divertor, ECR heating, NBI heating, plasma performance, turbulence, impurities (Some figures may appear in colour only in the online journal)

Introduction
Stellarators are free from current disruptions and are intrinsically capable to sustain a plasma steady-state without need for current drive [1]. The stellarator magnetic field, however, needs to be optimized to overcome major issues in neoclassical transport, magnetohydrodynamic equilibrium and stability, and fast particle confinement, in particular at high plasma beta and low collisionality [2][3][4]. After successful first operation [5][6][7], the optimized stellarator device Wendelstein 7-X [8,9] is now operating with (yet uncooled) graphite heat shields and a graphite island divertor [10,11]. Wendelstein 7-X is a high-iota, low shear stellarator with optimized magnetic field geometry and 30 m 3 plasma volume. It is the mission of the device to demonstrate steady-state (pulse length T p 1800 s) generation and confinement of fusion-relevant hydrogen and deuterium plasmas. The magnetic field with induction 2.5 T on the magnetic axis is generated using a set of non-planar and planar liquid-helium cooled superconducting NbTi coils. All plasma facing components are designed for active water cooling capability. Steady-state electron cyclotron resonance plasma heating is provided by long-pulse gyrotrons. Neutral beam injectors and ion cyclotron resonance heating are foreseen for high beta plasmas and fast particle physics investigations.
The device operation phase reported in the present paper is performed without water cooling of the main in-vessel components. This restricts the heating energy input to 200 MJ. High-performance plasma operation is nevertheless possible, but at limited pulse lengths (typical 10-30 s). Long discharges (up to 100 s) are restricted to lower heating power and consequently lower plasma performance. Fully integrated divertor operation must be demonstrated to develop a basis for highperformance steady-state operation which follows after the completion of the cooling water systems and the installation of the water-cooled divertor and the cryo pumps.
The present paper is structured in a machine description section 2, long-pulse high density plasmas section 3, and stellarator optimization section 4. The paper is summarized in section 5.

The Wendelstein 7-X stellarator device
As pointed out in section 1, the magnetic field geometry of the superconducting stellarator Wendelstein 7-X was optimized to address major issues of the classical stellarator [3,4]. A schematic drawing of the device and the rotational transform of some of the magnetic field configurations are shown in figure 1. The 50 non-planar coils (red) and 20 planar coils (orange) are connected in series via superconducting bus bars. All coils are bolted to a massive central support ring (gray) and additionally fixed by mostly welded, partially bolted or sliding local support elements. The complete magnet system and the support structures are cooled down to 3.4 K in the cryostat vacuum between the outer vessel and the plasma vessel. Both the plasma vessel, the outer vessel and the 253 ports are covered with a thermal insulation, based on multilayer foil and a thermal shield actively cooled to 70 K [12].
The main device parameters are listed in table 1. Stage 1 was the setup for the initial operation. After substantial extension of the in-vessel components and the heating systems, the present stage 2 was reached. Stage 3 is planned for the subsequent operation phase. Stage 4 is the projected full performance configuration of the device. The most powerful heating scheme of Wendelstein 7-X is the electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH) with at present 10 long-pulse capable 140 GHz gyrotrons [13]. On average each gyrotron accounts for 0.8 MW power coupled into the plasma which provides a highly flexible X2-mode and O2-mode heating scheme, both on-and off-axis. The flexibility and the well-defined heat deposition in the electron cyclotron resonance zone render ECRH being the most advanced heating and current drive scheme with the biggest potential for a future stellarator power reactor [14]. The first of two neutral beam injector (NBI) boxes have started operation with two positive ion sources and 55 kV acceleration voltage and up to 3.5 MW injection power [15]. The ion cyclotron resonance heating (ICRH) system requires an antenna that is carefully shaped to the three-dimensional plasma contour. This development is ongoing and commissioning is foreseen for the next operation phase [16]. To protect the (mostly uncooled) in-vessel components, the maximum heating energy during stage 2 is at present limited to 200 MJ, which implies typical discharge times between 10 and 100 s, depending on the input power. After completion of the water cooling systems and the replacement of the inertially cooled island divertor with an actively water-cooled one, the maximum heating energy will be extended step-wise to 18 GJ with at least one intermediate step at 1 GJ (stage 3).
Wendelstein 7-X started first operation in the year 2015. The heat and particle exhaust was controlled with five poloidal graphite limiters, the remaining wall was either steel or CuCrZr. Despite the unfavorable wall conditions, the plasma performance was quite remarkable with peak electron temperatures 8 keV with simultaneous peak ion temperature 2 keV and line averaged density 3 × 10 19 m −3 [5][6][7]. These are typical conditions for the core electron root confinement [5][6][7]17] which is characterized by a reversal of the radial electric field from edge to core [18]. First elements of stellarator optimization could be demonstrated by studying the bootstrap current and neoclassical transport [19].
For the second operation phase (stage 2) the limiters were replaced by an island divertor and major areas of the wall are covered with graphite tiles. The island divertor consists of ten separate modules formed by graphite target and baffle plates that are matched to the magnetic field structure of Wendelstein 7-X [10,11]. Depending on the magnetic configuration (given by the rotational transform ι/2π, see figure 1) natural magnetic islands form at the plasma boundary. They are intersected with the divertor target plates and thus establish a multi-Xpoint divertor for the exhaust of particle and heat flows across the last closed flux surface. The aim of the second operation phase is to demonstrate full divertor operation and exhaust combined with improved plasma performance.

High density stationary discharges
The plasma performance of Wendelstein 7-X in terms of plasma density, ion temperature, stored energy, and discharge duration has dramatically improved after the installation of the graphite heat shields and the graphite island divertor. Another significant step forward was made with a suite of wall conditioning measures [20]: The plasma vessel is baked at 150 °C in order to remove water and hydrocarbons from the vessel wall and in-vessel components. Without magnetic field, glow discharge cleaning (GDC) is applied in hydrogen (to reduce residual CO and CH 4 ) and helium gas (to reduce H 2 ). With the superconducting magnets ramped up, an additional wall conditioning inbetween discharges was made with ECRH short pulse trains followed by pumping intervals. The GDC in helium and hydrogen as well as the occasional ECRH pulse train conditioning of the plasma facing components (with total surface areas of 88 m 2 graphite and 82 m 2 steel) have greatly reduced the outgassing rates, rapidly dropping to values that were reached only at the end of the initial (stage 1) operation phase with graphite limiters. Plasma densities of 1-5 × 10 19 m −3 with electron temperature 5-10 keV were achieved with hydrogen gas fueling; higher densities where not accessible due to the radiative limit. High plasma densities up to 1.4 × 10 20 m −3 could be reached with repetitive hydrogen pellet injection and second harmonic ECR heating in O-polarization (O2-scheme, see figure 3(b) below). In a similar scenario with hydrogen plasma, at a central density of 8 × 10 19 m −3 , the ions are indirectly heated and a temperature of 3.4 keV with T e /T i ≈ 1 was accomplished, still with second harmonic ECR heating in X-polarization (X2-scheme). This discharge corresponds to a (stellarator) record nT i (0)τ E = 6.4 × 10 19 keV s m −3 with  . Futher details about the kinetic profiles are found in [21]. Routinely, stable 25 s long-pulse helium discharges with 2-3 MW ECRH power and up to 75 MJ injected energy were created for equilibrium and divertor load studies, with plasma densities around 5 × 10 19 m −3 and 5 keV electron temperature. Boronization was conducted for the first time half-way the experimental campaign [23] (in total three times). Here, a glow discharge with 10% diborane B 2 H 6 in 90% helium background gas was operated for 4-5 h to deposit a boron layer of about 50-100 nm thickness. The boron layer turned out to last for at about 200 plasma seconds on the strike line position of the divertor targets and for at least about 2000 plasma seconds on other wall elements. In fact, the excellent wall conditions did not degrade significantly during the accumulated 2400 s of plasma duration between each two boronization cycles and it can be assumed that longer cycle times are well possible. Figure 2(a) shows the difference between the discharge conditions before and after boronization [24]. With the same ECR heating power and normal gas puffing, about ×3 higher plasma densities could be reached without radiative collapse. This improvement is due to a reduced O and C content, which strongly reduces the radiative power losses predominantly in the plasma edge, where the radiative collapse usually starts. The observed critical densities and their scaling with heating power is compared to the scaling law derived in [25]. For the Wendelstein 7-X parameters the scaling n c ∝ P 0.6 /f 0. 4 imp is plotted for different impurity fraction values f imp = n imp /n e = 5%, 1% and 0.5%, respectively. Before boronization the observed n c values scale weaker than predicted even for f imp = 5%. After boronization, there is a good agreement with the scaling law for f imp = 0.5-1%. To highlight the effect of boronization on O and C impurities, spectroscopic measurements of O V and O VI as well as C V and C VI ions before and after boronization are shown in figure 2(b). The spectroscopic signals are normalized to the line-averaged plasma density measured for the respective discharge. Note that for the lower wavelengths, no absolute calibration is available and temperature and profile effects have not yet been taken into account. Nevertheless, a strong reduction of the spectral line strength by ×2.5 for carbon and ×6.5 . . . 8 for oxygen is evident and a similar reduction in the associated impurity concentration can be assumed. This is a clear indication for the expected gettering effect by the boron layer on the plasma facing components [26].
With the extension of the density limit, ECR heating schemes beyond the X-mode cut-off density 1.2 × 10 20 m −3 became important. In O-mode polarization ECR waves have a cut-off density of 2.4 × 10 20 m −3 , with the drawback of relatively low absorption rate of 70%, even at the favorable high electron temperature T e 3 keV and density n e = 1 × 10 20 m −3 . In combination with pellet injection, the heating scenario shown in figure 3 was developed [27][28][29]: The plasma start-up (here in helium) is made with three gyrotrons in X-mode polarization. During the following 2 s the polarization is changed to O-mode polarization. At t = 2 s the density ramp-up is steepend by repetitive hydrogen ice pellet injection and at t = 3 s further six gyrotrons (in O-mode) are added. At the peak density of 1.4 × 10 20 m −3 the electron temperature is still close to 3 keV. The 141 GHz electron cyclotron emission (ECE) signal vanishes due to excess of the X2-mode cut-off density (indicated by the orange strip). The stray radiation signal always remains in an acceptable range, even in the device module where the wave launcher is located. In the optimum O2-heating regime, the stray radiation level is found to be below 10 kW m −2 .
As outlined above, wall boronization has greatly extended the plasma density range to much higher values. After the first successful experiments in helium plasmas combined with hydrogen pellet injection, the previously described ECR O2-heating scheme became also the reference heating scheme for high density gas fueled hydrogen plasmas as well [27][28][29]. An example is shown in figure 4. The ECR heating power is 6 MW in total and is almost fully absorbed. The radiation fraction stays constant at 60%. At the (line-integrated) plasma densities >1 × 10 20 m −3 ions are efficiently heated by the electrons and one obtains almost thermal equilibration T e ≈ T i . The divertor is fully detached [30] and the power load drops to 1.5 MW. The discharge duration was limited to 14 s due to the technical limit of 80 MJ maximum injected energy   set at that time period of operation. Since the divertor power detachment turned out to be well under control and the power load on the targets correspondingly low, the technical limit for the total heating energy could be extended from 80 to 200 MJ. A similar O2-heated discharge could be extended to 30 s discharge duration at 5 MW heating power, again with full power detachment and similar plasma parameters [27]. In addition, high density operation could be demonstrated with pure neutral beam injection heating (3.5 MW H + ) after starting the plasma with ECRH (X2-mode). Possibly explained by the additional central fulling from the neutral beam, the plasma density increases throughout the NBI phase with more peaked density profiles and up to n(0) = 2 × 10 20 m −3 . The ion temper ature raises by about 10% to above 2 keV, the electron temperature drops after termination of the ECRH to values ≈20% below T i . The orbit losses related to the neutral beam injection are discussed in [27].

Stellarator optimization
It is the ultimate goal of Wendelstein 7-X to demonstrate the beneficial effect of the optimized magnetic field geometry, in particular reduced neoclassical transport and bootstrap current along with magnetic islands well-localized at the edge and good magneto-hydrodynamic stability [4]. Fast particle confinement is another important aspect of optimization [31]. The sum of all should result in improved plasma confinement and fully integrated, stable plasma scenarios with simultaneously high T i ≈ T e at high particle densities. In the ion root regime [32], the energy confinement times τ E are expected to be better than the ISS04 [33] stellarator scaling if most of the energy transport is neoclassical. High-performance plasma scenarios require good control of the plasma-wall interaction (in par ticular the impurity source), the heat and particle exhaust as well as the particle recycling. Details are discussed in [30]. In this section we present a number of experimental results that provide evidence for successful stellarator optimization. Figure 5(a) shows Rogowski coil measurements of the time evolution of the net toroidal plasma current for plasmas with constant ECR heating power in different magnetic field configurations: low iota (magenta line, label DAM), standard (blue lines, labels EIM and EJM), high mirror (green lines, label KKM), high iota (black lines, label FTM). The dashed red lines are exponential fits of the measurements. A prediction based on one-dimensional transport modelling and numerical calculation of the bootstrap current is shown in figure 5(b). The transport code requires as input the measured n e and T e profiles (not available for DAM). The time scale, mainly given by the R/L time ≈10 s (L and R are plasma inductance and resistance, respectively), and the expected strong reduction of the bootstrap current in high-mirror and high-iota configurations are well confirmed by both measurement and simulation. The simulations underestimate the measurements systematically ( figure 5(b) solid lines). This might well be due to an (unintended) ECCD component, which is currently under investigation. By considering in the simulations reasonable residual ECCD of about 2-3 kA they quantitatively agree well with the measurements (figure 5(b) dashed lines). First findings on the reduction of the bootstrap current owing to magnetic field optimization were already reported from the previous operation campaign without divertor [19].
The long discharge duration enables to make use of electron cyclotron current drive (ECCD) for a feed-forward control of the (edge) rotational transform [27][28][29], which is changed by the toroidal current evolution that strongly depends on the magnetic configuration and the discharge parameters. Central co-/counter ECCD leads under certain discharge conditions to fast, repetitive electron temperature collapses in the core or even a total plasma collapse. This is likely due to the rotational transform crossing unity ι/2π = 1, triggering an MHD instability [27,29].
During the above discussed high density, high performance 1.1 MJ discharge with pellet injection into a helium target plasma (see section 3), electrons and ions thermalize and the ambipolar radial electric field E r is expected to be negative throughout the plasma core (ion-root) [32]. This is clearly seen in measurements with the x-ray imaging crystal spectrometer (XICS, figure 6(a)), where the sudden transition from positive to negative E r is correlated with the time interval during which T e T i . The neoclassical heat transport is predicted to be significantly reduced in the ion-root regime, as discussed more comprehensively in [34]. Figure 6(b) shows the tomographic reconstruction of the soft x-ray radiation at the triangular cross section, using a set of poloidally arranged x-ray cameras [35]. The measurement is overlayed with the numerically calculated plasma equilibrium using the VMEC code [36] for β = 1%. There is a good agreement between measured and calculated plasma equilibrium. The Shafranov shift is found to be 1-2 cm only, as predicted for the optimized stellarator magnetic field with reduced Pfirsch-Schlüter current. For β 1.5% the the plasma in Wendelstein 7-X is expected to be MHD stable [3,4] and indeed no distinct activity is observed in the magnetic and x-ray diagnostics. As mentioned above, MHD instabilities can be driven by central ECCD. Alfvén modes were observed under certain NBI discharge scenarios. The analysis of the corresponding data is in progress and will be published elsewhere.
Impurity transport is another key issue of (optimized) stellarators. As discussed in section 3 the radiative density limit strongly depends on the impurity concentration fraction. Furthermore, impurity accumulation is considered as a major stellarator issue, since in particular in the ion-root confinement regime with T e T i , the neoclassical impurity convection is inwards-directed, as for example observed in the predecessor device Wendelstein 7-AS [37,38]. Recent neoclassical transport investigations have demonstrated that temperature screening can arise in stellarator plasmas in a mixed col lisionality regime (for hydrogen and impurity ions) at high ion temperatures [39]. Up to now, at β 1.5%, in Wendelstein 7-X no evidence for impurity accumulation has been found in all relevant plasma scenarios, even at high particle densities in the 1 × 10 20 m −3 range as well as in the ionroot confinement regime. To investigate the transport physics of impurity particles, active diagnostics namely laser blow-off (LBO) [40] and impurity pellet injection [41] (tracer encapsulated solid pellets, TESPEL) are used, combined with fast high-resolution spectro meters. Figure 7(a) shows the evolution of line radiation from different Fe ionization stages after injecting iron (LBO) into a hydrogen plasma at 5 MW of ECR heating power and a line-averaged plasma density of  2 × 10 19 m −3 . The rise-time and the decay-time of the different charge stages depend on the radial diffusion D(r) and convection v(r) profiles and consequently contain valuable information on the impurity transport. The measured data is compared with forward-modelling using the 1d impurity transport code STRAHL [42]. If as input parameters purely neo-classical diffusion and convection profiles are used, obtained from DKES [43] code runs (figures 7(b) and (c)), only poor agreement is obtained (not shown). In contrast to that, if additional anomalous diffusion is assumed (black line in figure 7(b)), the forward-modelling calculations match the experimental data very well (black curves in figure 7(a)). The corresponding level of anomalous diffusion is more than two orders of magnitude above the neo-classical level, which strongly suggests dominant turbulent transport. Probably ion temperature gradient (ITG) driven turbulence is the main contributor here, since ITG is expected during flat density gradients and high T e /T i ratios as present during the experiments [44]. More detailed and systematic studies under different plasma parameters, as well as comparisons with gyro-kinetic simulations, are ongoing [45].
Wendelstein 7-X is neoclassically optimized and turbulent transport is expected to play a significant role in the regulation of radial heat diffusivity and particle exhaust. Turbulence studies are therefore of key importance and a suite of diagnostic instruments is available, namely correlation reflectometry [18], various probes for edge turbulence measurements [46] and phase contrast imaging (PCI) for characterization of turbulence in the plasma core [47]. PCI samples plasma density fluctuations along the line-of-sight of an infrared laser beam in the predominantly unfavorable magnetic curvature region. Nonlinear gyrokinetic simulations indicate that ion temper ature gradient (ITG) and trapped electron modes (TEM) are possible in the plasma core but the latter are different from their tokamak counterparts [48,49]. Both modes are unstable in regions of unfavorable magnetic curvature, which in Wendelstein 7-X are mainly localized in the outboard bean-shaped cross section. In usual gas-fueled discharges, ion temperature and plasma density gradient regions are well separated. Thus, ITG modes are destabilized deep in the plasma core, whereas TEM modes are localized in the edge plasma. An interesting observation is made with PCI when the plasma is centrally fueled by pellets ( figure 8(a)). The density fluctuation amplitude is usually proportional to the line-integrated plasma density ( figure 8(b)). However, after pellet fueling t 2 = 1.6 s, the fluctuation level suddenly drops and improved energy confinement is observed. The fluctuation spectrogram supports the picture: The entire fluctuation spectrum is temporarily reduced in amplitude, but evolves transiently for t 3 < t < t 4 starting from high frequencies until the usual linear scaling is recovered. Linear gyrokinetic simulations suggest [50], that the turbulence suppression is the result of a radial overlap between plasma density and temperature gradients, as it is generally observed in pellet discharges. Low T e /T i ratios and gradient length L Ti L n 2-3m stabilize ITG, whereas TEM is naturally stabilized by the good magnetic curvature regions [48,49]. This observation shows that indeed turbulent transport plays an important role in Wendelstein 7-X and that its reduction, e.g. by centrally peaked density profiles, could well be the key for the development of improved confinement scenarios. A more comprehensive discussion of turbulence and the related transport is found in [51].

Summary
In conclusion the plasma performance of the optimized stellarator Wendelstein 7-X has significantly improved after the installation of the graphite island divertor and the graphite wall elements. Impurity and heat exhaust are now well under control and long high-density discharges became accessible, especially after boronization. With a boronized wall, the radiative density limit could be shifted to three times higher values, on the expense of a slight degradation of the energy confinement time at the limit. With quite low ECR heating power, record values for the triple product in stellarators were achieved, albeit only transiently for a short time. The long discharges may well have set other records in comparison to other fusion research devices. The main limitations for highperformance long-pulse plasmas are limited heating power and not yet fully implemented water cooling of the in-vessel components. Nevertheless, in general excellent plasma performance with up to β = 1.2% and β(0) = 3.5% was achieved by relatively modest ECR O-mode heating power. More heating power is needed to explore the high beta β > 5% and low ν * = 10 −6 . . . 10 −5 regimes, where stellarator optimization is relevant in all aspects.