Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7963326 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Hydrogen isotopes retention and bubbles formation are critical issues for tungsten as plasma-facing material in future fusion reactors. In this work, the formation and growing up behavior of hydrogen bubbles in tungsten were investigated experimentally. The planar TEM samples were implanted by 6.0keV hydrogens to a fluence of 3.38Ã1018Hâ
cmâ2 at room temperature, and well-defined hydrogen bubbles were observed by TEM. It was demonstrated that hydrogen bubbles formed when exposed to a fluence of 1.5Ã1018Hâ
cmâ2, and the hydrogen bubbles grew up with the implantation fluence. In addition, the bubbles' size appeared larger with higher beam flux until saturated at a certain flux, even though the total fluence was kept the same. Finally, in order to understand the thermal annealing effect on the bubbles behavior, hydrogen-implanted samples were annealed at 400, 600, 800, and 1000â¯Â°C for 3â¯h. It was obvious that hydrogen bubbles' morphology changed at temperatures higher than 800â¯Â°C.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Jiangtao Zhao, Xuan Meng, Xingcai Guan, Qiang Wang, Kaihong Fang, Xiaohui Xu, Yongkai Lu, Jun Gao, Zhenlin Liu, Tieshan Wang,