Evolution of transiently melt damaged tungsten under ITER-relevant divertor plasma heat loading
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Author | |
Abstract |
A high-repetition-rate ELM simulation system was used at both the Pilot-PSI and Magnum-PSI linear plasma devices to investigate the nature of W damage under multiple shallow melt events and the subsequent surface evolution under ITER relevant plasma fluence and high ELM number. First, repetitive shallow melting of two W monoblocks separated by a 0.5 mm gap was obtained by combined pulsed/steady-state hydrogen plasma loading at normal incidence in the Pilot-PSI device. Surface modifications including melting, cracking and strong net-reshaping of the surface are obtained. During the second step, the pre-damaged W sample was exposed to a high flux plasma regime in the Magnum-PSI device with a grazing angle of 35°. SEM analysis indicates no measurable change to the surface state after the exposure in Magnum-PSI. An increase in transient-induced temperature rise of 40% is however observed, indicating a degradation of thermal properties over time. |
Year of Publication |
2015
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Journal |
Journal of Nuclear Materials
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Volume |
463
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Issue |
Aug
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Number of Pages |
193 - 197
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DOI | |
PId |
e348a07be5ab772291c02bc3e1962909
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Alternate Journal |
J. Nucl. Mater.
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Journal Article
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