DIFFER
DIFFER Publication

Early stage damage of ultrafine-grained tungsten materials exposed to low energy helium ion irradiation

Author
Abstract

Tungsten is considered as a plasma facing component in the divertor region of the International Thermonuclear Experiment Reactor (ITER). High flux, high fluence helium (He) exposure of tungsten surfaces induces severe morphology changes and nanostructure formation, which may eventually erode tungsten and risk the operation of the reactor. In this study, we investigate the response of ultrafine-grained tungsten under low flux (∼1020 ions m−2 s−1), low fluence, low energy (30–70 eV) He irradiation at different temperatures in order to study the early stage of nanostructure formation. Rod-shape nanostructures formed at low temperatures (600 °C) and a He fluence of 1 × 1023 m−2. High resolution, cross-section TEM images of irradiated grains demonstrated bubble formation not inside the nanostructures but deep inside the grains. At higher temperatures (900 °C) and the same fluence of 1 × 1023 m−2, large tungsten asperities (stone-shape and fiber-form structures), which are attributed to the burst and erosion of the surface grains. Moreover, low fluence (1020 m−2–1021 m−2) and high temperature (900 °C) irradiation demonstrated low density of non-coalesced bubbles inside the TEM samples. The results suggest that morphology changes can exist in He irradiated tungsten even with low bubble densities; thus, an additional factor such as surface stresses may dictate the observed nanostructure formation.

Year of Publication
2015
Journal
Fusion Engineering and Design
Volume
93
Issue
april
Number of Pages
9-14
DOI
10.1016/j.fusengdes.2015.02.001
PId
103981e82e4356d890c5ba12e5358093
Alternate Journal
Fusion Eng. Des.
Journal Article
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