Burrell received bachelor's degree in physics from
Stanford University in 1968. He then received a master's degree and a Ph.D. in physics from
Caltech in 1970 and 1975 respectively. He then worked at
General Atomics in fusion research with
tokamaks, in particular
DIII-D tokamak from General Atomics. Before that, he did research at the ISX-A and ISA-B Tokamak of the
Oak Ridge National Laboratory. He played an important role in the study of the
H-mode (i.e. high-confinement mode) discovered in 1982 at the
ASDEX tokamak in magnetically enclosed fusion plasmas and the underlying transport mechanisms, in particular the suppression of
turbulence by the formation of shear currents. Burrell was involved in the discovery of quiet H-mode (quiescent H-mode) at DIII-D in 1999, which has the advantages of H-modes but no edge instabilities (edge localized modes, ELM). Burrell also developed methods for
plasma diagnostics. == Honors and awards ==