Ion Flux Characterization of H$_{2}$ and D$_{2}$ Plasmas Produced by an ECR Plasma Source

POSTER

Abstract

The use of lithium-conditioned plasma facing components in tokamaks has been shown to improve plasma confinement through a reduction in hydrogen recycling. Surface science techniques are being applied to probe the interactions between lithiated PFC's and H/D plasmas. A Tectra$^{TM}$ Gen 2 plasma source has been commissioned that utilizes electron cyclotron resonance to produce a plasma discharge inside a vacuum test chamber and can produce ion fluxes similar to those typically seen in tokamaks. This source will be utilized to study H/D uptake by lithium films on Mo substrates as a precursor to NSTX-U experiments. In this work we report on the characterization of this source as a first step in its use in surface analysis studies. The source is operated in H$_{2}$ and D$_{2}$ gases and the subsequent ion flux of the plasma is measured by a Faraday Cup. Ion flux measurements are presented in a range of gas pressures and grid voltages up to 2kV.

*Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internship funded by Department of Energy.

Authors

  • Eric Kaiser

    • Rowan University
  • A.M. Capece

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    • P.P.P.L.
  • J.P. Roszell

    • Princeton University
    • Princeton Univ.
  • Charles Skinner

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    • P.P.P.L.
  • Bruce Koel

    • Princeton University