Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7965657 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2015 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The recrystallization of bulk tungsten is investigated under various thermal loads that are relevant to the accumulation energy during Type-I ELM in ITER H-mode operation. A thermal plasma torch is used to examine only the thermal load effect on the material; therefore, the charge and atomic effects are ignored. In this condition, recrystallization is observed in bulk W with a surface temperature above 1700 °C. The effect becomes severe with a finite recrystallization thickness near the surface, which introduces vertical cracking along grain boundaries with increasing thermal load. However, plasma-sprayed tungsten (PS-W) is not crystallized because neighboring lamellas merge, destroying their interlayer and producing no vertical cracks. This is attributed to an annealing effect in PS-W. Therefore, these results suggest that a multilayer W structure is advantageous in the fabrication of W, especially for long pulse operation in a future fusion reactor.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Hyun-Su Kim, Sun-Taek Lim, Younggil Jin, Jin Young Lee, Jae-Min Song, Gon-Ho Kim,