Time dependent chemical interactions of lithium, deuterium, and oxygen on lithium-coated graphite surfaces
POSTER
Abstract
Lithium conditioning of plasma facing components has been used for particle control in fusion devices such as TFTR, CDX-U, FTU, T-11M, TJ-II and NSTX and has yielded improved plasma performance. A PMI probe has been installed on NSTX to provide an in-situ diagnostic for surface chemistry and deuterium retention measurements. Recent controlled laboratory experiments at Purdue University are investigating the chemical functionalities in lithiated graphite and the mechanism by which D is retained. XPS results show that Li reacts readily with residual oxygen in ATJ graphite, and immediately begins to intercalate into the substrate. Additionally, it has been found that Li-O and Li-C react to D proportional to the lithium thickness, suggesting a D saturation threshold. This work investigates the transient nature of the lithium and oxygen functionalities, their response to time varying D flux, and the implications to NSTX.
*Work supported by USDOE Contract DE-FG02-08ER54990, DE-AC02-09CH11466.