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T E C. Measurement and modeling of hydrogenic retention in molybdenum with the DIONISOS experiment. G.M. Wright University of Wisconsin-Madison, FOM – Institute for Plasma Physics Rijnhuizen D.G. Whyte, B. Lipschultz Plasma Science and Fusion Center, M.I.T. The Pilot-PSI Team
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TEC Measurement and modeling of hydrogenic retention in molybdenum with the DIONISOS experiment G.M. Wright University of Wisconsin-Madison, FOM – Institute for Plasma Physics Rijnhuizen D.G. Whyte, B. Lipschultz Plasma Science and Fusion Center, M.I.T. The Pilot-PSI Team FOM – Institute for Plasma Physics Rijnhuizen
Outline • The DIONISOS experiment • The influence of MeV-range ion irradiation • The influence of high flux plasma exposure • Diffusion and bulk retention • Consequences and solutions • Summary and conclusions
Outline • The DIONISOS experiment • The influence of MeV-range ion irradiation • The influence of high flux plasma exposure • Diffusion and bulk retention • Consequences and solutions • Summary and conclusions
Dynamics ofIONImplantation and Sputtering Of Surfaces DIONISOS = • Simultaneous ion beam irradiation and plasma exposure of target. • Real-time, in-situ measurement of D concentrations using 3He(d,p)a NRA. • Helicon source yields high flux (~1021 D/m2s), low temperature (Te ~ 5 eV) plasmas • Target can be biased to 500 V and heated to ~750 K.
Trapped deuterium depth profiles measured in-situ emphasize the importance of diffusion Flux density ~ 1 x 1021 D/m2s Total fluence ~ 1.5 x 1024 D/m2 3.5 MeV 3He irradiating surface Trapped D concentrations as high as 3 at.% • Trapped D profiles are highly sensitive to Mo temperature: • low TMo diffusion limited • high TMo flat profile, trap limited
Indications that retention for 600-700 K extends much deeper than 5 mm. Implies total retention is lowest at 300K. D retention in Mo after exposure to 3.5 MeV 3He beam and D plasma in DIONISOS No dependence on incident ion energy.
Outline • The DIONISOS experiment • The influence of MeV-range ion irradiation • The influence of high flux plasma exposure • Diffusion and bulk retention • Consequences and solutions • Summary and conclusions
3.5 MeV 3He irradiation of the target produce lattice displacements that can become traps TMo = 500 K Vbias = 100 V D flux = 1021 m-2s-1 3He flux = 3×1017 m-2s-1 texposure = 1500 s For these conditions, displacements due to the 3He irradiation account for ~85 % of the total trapped D. Displacements account for a larger fraction of trap sites deeper into the Mo bulk near the end of the 3He ion range.
Trap density increases non-linearly with 3He ion fluence (and displacements) TMo = 500 K Vbias = 100 V Same plasma parameters Trap density (3He fluence)1/4(dpa)1/4 Non-linearity indicates an approach to a saturation level but also a large increase in trap density after only a small amount of 3He fluence.
Scaling of trap production from irradiation may depend on several factors Takagi et al, Fusion Sci. & Technol. 41 (2002) 897. 0.8 MeV 3He beam TMo = 493 K Indicates a dependence on irradiating ion energy. Trap production may also depend on radiating species (ions/neutrons), target composition, and target temperature.
Outline • The DIONISOS experiment • The influence of MeV-range ion irradiation • The influence of high flux plasma exposure • Diffusion and bulk retention • Consequences and solutions • Summary and conclusions
Plasma exposure also produces trap sites well beyond the implantation range rimplant~ 10 nm TMo = 500 K Vbias = 100 V D ~ 1021 m-2s-1 High rate of low-energy ion implantation into a target with very low natural hydrogenic solubility (<10-7 D/Mo for conditions in DIONISOS) Indicates a trap production mechanism that extends beyond rimplant or the production of traps in rimplant that subsequently mobilize into the bulk.
Vacancy clustering and void/blister formation How does surface trap production scale? Implanted D super-saturates The implantation zone. W atom is displaced and a vacancy is formed. • What experimental factors influence strength and formation of stress fields? • Plasma flux density – sets rate of implantation (source) • Hydrogenic solubility – sets saturation limit (boundary condition) • Diffusion/surface recombination – rate-limiting process removes D from implantation zone (sink).
Dynamic capabilities of DIONISOS yield insights into the rate limiting processes For a diffusion-limited release, DnDsurfa Eion (deeper implantation). Opposite effect observed in DIONISOS implying a recombination-limited release.
Outline • The DIONISOS experiment • The influence of MeV-range ion irradiation • The influence of high flux plasma exposure • Diffusion and bulk retention • Consequences and solutions • Summary and conclusions
Mobile traps and implanted D implies retention in the bulk material will be significant Simulated D retention profile: D = 1023 m-2s-1 No MeV ion irradiation Trapplasma D 3 s pulse, 3 s cooling, 30 s wait time Repeated and rapid thermal cycling drives the trapped D into the bulk. Simulation results in linear increase in retention with fluence. High hydrogenic diffusion rates in Mo and assumption of mobile trap sites are key to this mechanism. I-14, B. Lipschultz et al.
Underlying physics apply to materials with similar hydrogenic properties Takagi et al. Fusion Science and Technology 41 (2002) 897. Oliver et al. Journal of Nuclear Materials 307-311 (2002) 1418. Tanabe et al. Journal of Nuclear Materials 191-194 (1992) 439. Frauenfelder et al. Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology 6 (1969) 388. Ogorodnikova et al. Journal of Applied Physics 103 (2008) 034902.
TEC Tungsten Pilot-PSI experiment allows for tests at ITER-relevant plasma flux densities P1-65, A.W. Kleyn, G.M. Wright, et al. W targets D~1023-1024 m-2s-1 Te ~ 2 eV TW ~ 1000-1600 K Retained fraction determined with TDS D retention is low and may possibly indicate saturation. High tungsten temperatures have mitigated plasma-driven trap production.
Outline • The DIONISOS experiment • The influence of MeV-range ion irradiation • The influence of high flux plasma exposure • Diffusion and bulk retention • Consequences and solutions • Summary and conclusions
What are the issues and how do we solve them? • Bulk displacements and high flux, low energy plasma exposure can both create trap sites in high-Z refractory metals. • High H diffusion and trap production in the bulk means retention is higher at moderately elevated target temperatures (400-600 K). • High H diffusion and mobile traps indicate retention deep in the bulk occurs with repeated thermal cycling (T removal concerns). • What are the solutions? • High ambient surface temperature (hot walls) mitigates plasma-driven trap production and anneals irradiation-produced traps (Oliver et al. J. Nucl. Mater. 329-333 (2004) 977). • Control access of implanted hydrogen to the bulk (diffusion barriers). Diffusion-limited regime has lowest retention. 0-19, D.G. Whyte
Summary & Conclusions • The DIONISOS experiment has yielded new insights into hydrogenic retention properties of high-Z materials in an irradiating environment. • Irradiation of Mo with MeV ions produces bulk displacements that lead to significant trap concentrations throughout the irradiating ion range. • Exposure of Mo to a high flux of low energy plasma ions can create trap sites extending much deeper than rimplant • High diffusion rates and mobile traps in combination with thermal cycling can lead to retention throughout the bulk of the material and a linear increase in retention with incident fluence. • Many of the underlying physics driving these mechanisms in Mo can also be applied to W.
Summary & Conclusions • In future fusion devices, plasma facing components will be exposed to high plasma fluxes and 14 MeV neutron irradiation. The combination could lead to high retention rates even in refractory metals • Plasma, radiative, and neutron heating activates diffusion. Trap production by n-irradiation means traps will be distributed throughout the bulk. Even small local D/T concentrations could lead to high overall retention. • Diffusion barriers can limit retention in the bulk. • Operating with hot walls (900-1000 K) would solve many problems with hydrogenic retention in refractory metals.