High-confinement mode
In plasma physics and magnetic confinement fusion, the high-confinement mode (H-mode) is a phenomenon observed in toroidal plasmas such as tokamaks where the particle and energy confinement is significantly enhanced. Toroidal fusion plasmas generally exhibit a degradation of confinement properties with applied plasma heating (such as neutral beam injection). Above a certain heating power threshold, the plasma discharge transitions to H-mode with a sudden increase in particle and energy confinement of the plasma. The opposite situation without such transition is called low-confinement mode (L-mode).
The H-mode phenomenon was discovered in 1982 on the ASDEX diverted tokamak. It has since been reproduced in all major toroidal confinement devices, and is foreseen to be the baseline operational scenario of many future reactors (such as ITER and SPARC).
The physical origin of H-mode is an open problem in plasma physics. H-mode plasma edge features a narrow region of reduced turbulent transport and enhanced thermodynamic gradients (density, temperature and pressure), known as the edge transport barrier or the pedestal. The reduction of turbulence is thought to be caused by stabilizing mechanisms related to the magnetic shear at the plasma edge. The steep profile gradients at the edge also drive a particular form of magnetohydrodynamic instability termed edge localized modes.