Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5454318 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2016 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
Tungsten is a primary candidate for plasma facing materials for future fusion devices. An important safety concern in the design of plasma facing components is the retention of hydrogen isotopes. Available experimental data is vast and scattered, and a consistent physical model of retention of hydrogen isotopes in tungsten is still missing. In this work we propose a model of non-equilibrium hydrogen isotopes trapping under fusion relevant plasma exposure conditions. The model is coupled to a diffusion-trapping simulation tool and is used to interpret recent experiments involving high plasma flux exposures. From the computational analysis performed, it is concluded that high flux high temperature exposures (T = 1000 K, flux = 1024 D/m2/s and fluence of 1026 D/m2) result in generation of sub-surface damage and bulk diffusion, so that the retention is driven by both sub-surface plasma-induced defects (bubbles) and trapping at natural defects. On the basis of the non-equilibrium trapping model we have estimated the amount of H stored in the sub-surface region to be â¼10â5 atâ1, while the bulk retention is about 4 Ã 10â7 atâ1, calculated by assuming the sub-surface layer thickness of about 10 μm and adjusting the trap concentration to comply with the experimental results for the integral retention.
Related Topics
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Petr Grigorev, Dmitry Matveev, Anastasiia Bakaeva, Dmitry Terentyev, Evgeny E. Zhurkin, Guido Van Oost, Jean-Marie Noterdaeme,