Reactor relevant heat flux and displacement damage on ultra-fine grain tungsten
POSTER
Abstract
Ultra-fine grain tungsten (UFG W) and ITER-grade W plasma-facing samples are exposed to reactor relevant conditions in the DIII-D divertor using DiMES. Effects of displacement damage on the deuterium (D) retention is examined using flat samples pre-damaged with 12 MeV Si ions up to 0.6 dpa. Damaged UFG W releases its trapped D inventory at temperatures < 500 C, but most of the inventory in damaged ITER W is still retained at 500 C. Tritium retention could therefore be mitigated in UFG W with routine low temperature tile baking. Surface damage effects are also examined using protruding angled samples exposed to heat fluxes up to 10 MW/m2 during ELMs. The ITER W shows inter-granular cracks and develops < 1 μm diameter holes on the surface. UFG W develops cracks and vertically displaced grains along with surface features as large as 10s of μm consistent with local melting and droplet migration. These observations contradict e-beam experiments in which transient ELM-like heating causes less damage to the surface of UFG W materials than ITER W. Synergistic effects between heat and plasma particle fluxes may explain the differing results.
*Supported by US DOE under DE-AC04-94AL85000, DE-FG02-07ER54917, DE-AC52-07NA27344, DE-AC05-000R22725, and DE-FC02-04ER54698.
Presenters
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Joseph L Barton
- Sandia Natl Labs