Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7965718 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2015 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Recovery of a flat tungsten surface from a nano-tendril surface is attempted through three techniques; a mechanical wipe, a 1673 K annealing, and laser-induced thermal transients. Results were determined through SEM imaging and elastic recoil detection to assess the helium content in the surface. The mechanical wipe leaves a â¼0.5 μm deep layer of nano-tendrils on the surface post-wipe regardless of the initial nano-tendril layer depth. Laser-induced thermal transients only significantly impact the surface morphology at heat loads of 35.2 MJ/m2 s1/2 or above, however a fully flat or recovered surface was not achieved for 100 transients at this heat load despite reducing the helium content by a factor of â¼7. A 1673 K annealing removes all detectable levels of helium but sub-surface voids/bubbles remain intact. The surface is recovered to a nearly flat state with only some remnants of nano-tendrils re-integrating into the surface remaining.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
G.M. Wright, G.G. van Eden, L.A. Kesler, G. De Temmerman, D.G. Whyte, K.B. Woller,