Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10645174 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
On a single-pulse basis, the tungsten armor for the chamber walls in a laser inertial fusion energy power plant must withstand X-ray fluences of 0.4-1.2Â J/cm2 with almost no mass loss, and preferably no surface changes. We have exposed preheated tungsten samples to 0.27 and 0.9Â J/cm2 X-ray fluence from the Z accelerator at Sandia National Laboratories to determine the single-shot X-ray damage threshold. Earlier focused ion beam analysis has shown that rolled powdered metal formed tungsten and tungsten alloys, will melt when exposed to 2.3Â J/cm2 on Z, but not at 1.3Â J/cm2. Three forms of tungsten - single-crystal (SING), chemical-vapor-deposited (CVD), and rolled powdered metal (PWM) - were exposed to fluence levels of 0.9 J/cm2 without any apparent melting. However, the CVD and PWM sample surfaces were rougher after exposure than the SING sample, which was not roughened. BUCKY (1D) calculations show a threshold of 0.5Â J/cm2 for melting on Z. The present experiments indicate no melting but limited surface changes occur with polycrystalline samples (PWM and CVD) at 0.9Â J/cm2 and no surface changes other than debris for samples at 0.27Â J/cm2.
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Authors
Tina J. Tanaka, Greg A. Rochau, Robert R. Peterson, Craig L. Olson,