Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7963638 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2018 | 29 Pages |
Abstract
Deuterium trapping at irradiation-induced defects in tungsten, a candidate material for plasma facing components in fusion reactors, was revealed by positron annihilation spectroscopy. Pure tungsten was electron-irradiated (8.5Â MeVÂ at â¼373Â K and to a dose of â¼1Â ÃÂ 10â3 dpa) or neutron-irradiated (at 573Â K to a dose of â¼0.3 dpa), followed by post-irradiation annealing at 573Â K for 100Â h in deuterium gas of â¼0.1Â MPa. In both cases of electron- or neutron-irradiation, vacancy clusters were found by positron lifetime measurements. In addition, positron annihilation with deuterium electrons was demonstrated by coincidence Doppler broadening measurements, directly indicating deuterium trapping at vacancy-type defects. This is expected to cause significant increase in deuterium retention in irradiated-tungsten.
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Authors
T. Toyama, K. Ami, K. Inoue, Y. Nagai, K. Sato, Q. Xu, Y. Hatano,