Electron cyclotron emission calibration with Thomson scattering using a wide scan of toroidal magnetic field of KSTAR

Rev Sci Instrum. 2024 Aug 1;95(8):083538. doi: 10.1063/5.0218522.

Abstract

The Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research (KSTAR) tokamak is capable of operating at a wide range of toroidal magnetic fields up to 3.5 T at the major radius. The electron cyclotron emission (ECE) diagnostic on KSTAR is required to cover a broad frequency range for electron temperature profile measurements in both the low and high field sides. To meet these broadband requirements, the ECE system consists of W-band (78-110 GHz) and D-band (110-162 GHz) heterodyne radiometers. The two radiometers are connected to 28 and 48 detection channels, respectively. However, since the absolute ECE calibration based on the hot-cold calibration has been very challenging, an alternative method of calibration was performed using Thomson scattering measurements and varying toroidal magnetic fields. As the toroidal magnetic field is scanned from 1.6 to 3.2 T in steps of 0.2 T, most of the 76 ECE channels are calibrated relatively by the electron temperature values of Thomson scattering in a narrow region (0.2 < r/a <0.6). In this article, the methodological details of the ECE calibration are described. In addition, to demonstrate the robustness of the ECE calibration factors, the calibrated electron temperature profiles from ECE measurements are compared with the ion temperature profiles in terms of the plasma position as the plasma positon shifts outward.