Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7987414 | Nuclear Materials and Energy | 2017 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Retention of plasma-implanted D is studied in W targets damaged by a Cu ion beam at up to 0.2 dpa with sample temperatures between 300 K and 1200 K. At a D plasma ion fluence of 1024/m2 on samples damaged to 0.2 dpa at 300 K, the retained D retention inventory is 4.6âà1020 D/m2, about â¼5.5 times higher than in undamaged samples. The retained inventory drops to 9âà1019 D/m2 for samples damaged to 0.2 dpa at 1000 K, consistent with onset of vacancy annealing at a rate sufficient to overcome the elevated rate of ion beam damage; at a damage temperature of 1200 K retention is nearly equal to values seen in undamaged materials. A nano-scale technique provides thermal conductivity measurements from the Cu-ion beam displacement damaged region. We find the thermal conductivity of W damaged to 0.2 dpa at room temperature drops from the un-irradiated value of 182 ± 3.3 W/m K to 53 ± 8 W/m K.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
G.R. Tynan, R.P. Doerner, J. Barton, R. Chen, S. Cui, M. Simmonds, Y. Wang, J.S. Weaver, N. Mara, S. Pathak,