Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7965684 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2015 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
The development of a transient sputtering technique in PISCES-A plasmas is reported. A Nd:YAG laser is used to ablate impurities from a sample placed outside the plasma column, delivering a short (â¼10 μs) pulse of impurities into the plasma. The injected impurity ions travel down the plasma column and cause a brief (â¼10-100 μs) pulse of line emission from sputtered target material. This technique offers some advantages over steady-state sputtering experiments: a wide range of impurity ions can be injected, and incoming impurity ion and sputtered atom velocities can be inferred from time of flight measurements. Measurements of Mo and W sputtering by Al2+ and B+ ions are presented. The Mo sputtering yields are found to be about 5-10 times lower than expected, consistent with steady state measurements of sputtering of Mo by He+ under the same conditions. W sputtering is also lower than predicted.
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
E.M. Hollmann, D. Nishijima, R.P. Doerner,