The accumulation of defects, and in particular He bubbles, can have significant implications for the performance of materials exposed to the plasma in magnetic-confinement nuclear fusion reactors. Some of the most promising candidates for deployment into such environments are nanocrystalline materials as the engineering of grain boundary density offers the possibility of tailoring their radiation resistance properties. In order to investigate the microstructural evolution of ultrafine- and nanocrystalline-grained tungsten under conditions similar to those in a reactor, a transmission electron microscopy study with in situ 2 keV He+ ion irradiation at 950°C has been completed. A dynamic and complex evolution in the microstructure was observed including the formation of defect clusters, dislocations and bubbles. Nanocrystalline grains with dimensions less than around 60 nm demonstrated lower bubble density and greater bubble size than larger nanocrystalline (60–100 nm) and ultrafine (100–500 nm) grains. In grains over 100 nm, uniform distributions of bubbles and defects were formed. At higher fluences, large faceted bubbles were observed on the grain boundaries, especially on those of nanocrystalline grains, indicating the important role grain boundaries can play in trapping He and thus in giving rise to the enhanced radiation tolerance of nanocrystalline materials.
This work discusses the response of ultrafine-grained tungsten materials to high-flux, high-fluence, low energy pure He irradiation. Ultrafine-grained tungsten samples were exposed in the Pilot-PSI (Westerhout et al 2007 Phys. Scr. T128 18) linear plasma device at the Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research (DIFFER) in Nieuwegein, the Netherlands. The He flux on the tungsten samples ranged from 1.0 × 1023–2.0 × 1024 ions m−2 s−1, the sample bias ranged from a negative (20–65) V, and the sample temperatures ranged from 600–1500 °C. SEM analysis of the exposed samples clearly shows that ultrafine-grained tungsten materials have a greater fluence threshold to the formation of fuzz by an order or magnitude or more, supporting the conjecture that grain boundaries play a major role in the mechanisms of radiation damage. Pre-fuzz damage analysis is addressed, as in the role of grain orientation on structure formation. Grains of (1 1 0) and (1 1 1) orientation showed only pore formation, while (0 0 1) oriented grains showed ripples (higher structures) decorated with pores. Blistering at the grain boundaries is also observed in this case. In situ TEM analysis during irradiation revealed facetted bubble formation at the grain boundaries likely responsible for blistering at this location. The results could have significant implications for future plasma-burning fusion devices given the He-induced damage could lead to macroscopic dust emission into the fusion plasma.
Several proposed mechanisms and theoretical models exist concerning nanostructure evolution on III-V semiconductors (particularly GaSb) via ion beam irradiation. However, making quantitative contact between experiment on the one hand and model-parameter dependent predictions from different theories on the other is usually difficult. In this study, we take a different approach and provide an experimental investigation with a range of targets (GaSb, GaAs, GaP) and ion species (Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe) to determine new parametric trends regarding nanostructure evolution. Concurrently, atomistic simulations using binary collision approximation over the same ion/target combinations were performed to determine parametric trends on several quantities related to existing model. A comparison of experimental and numerical trends reveals that the two are broadly consistent under the assumption that instabilities are driven by chemical instability based on phase separation. Furthermore, the atomistic simulations and a survey of material thermodynamic properties suggest that a plausible microscopic mechanism for this process is an ion-enhanced mobility associated with energy deposition by collision cascades.
BTEM micrographs of the ultrafine-grained tungsten sample irradiated with 30 eV He particles to a fluence of 1x 10 23 m -2 at 600 °C showing (a) several rod-shape nanostructures; (b) high resolution image of a rod-shape nanostructure; (c) region of bubbles in between two rod-shape nanostructures and (d) region of highly dense large bubbles ~ 10 nm below the sample surface. Images in (c) and (d) were taken at under-focus conditions. Graphical Abstract (for review) 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 (~ 10 20 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 1x 10 23 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 1x 10 23 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 (10 20 m -2 to10 21 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 2 bubble densities, thus, an additional factor such as surface stresses may dictate the observed nanostructure formation.
We investigated the effect of silicide formation on ion-induced nanopatterning of silicon with various ultrathin metal coatings. Silicon substrates coated with 10 nm Ni, Fe, and Cu were irradiated with 200 eV argon ions at normal incidence. Real time grazing incidence small angle x-ray scattering (GISAXS) and x-ray fluorescence (XRF) were performed during the irradiation process and real time measurements revealed threshold conditions for nanopatterning of silicon at normal incidence irradiation. Three main stages of the nanopatterning process were identified. The real time GISAXS intensity of the correlated peaks in conjunction with XRF revealed that the nanostructures remain for a time period after the removal of the all the metal atoms from the sample depending on the binding energy of the metal silicides formed. Ex-situ XPS confirmed the removal of all metal impurities. In-situ XPS during the irradiation of Ni, Fe, and Cu coated silicon substrates at normal incidence demonstrated phase separation and the formation of different silicide phases that occur upon metal-silicon mixing. Silicide formation leads to nanostructure formation due the preferential erosion of the non-silicide regions and the weakening of the ion induced mass redistribution. V
The objective of the materials analysis particle probe (MAPP) in NSTX is to enable prompt and direct analysis of plasma-facing components exposed to plasma discharges. MAPP allows multiple samples to be introduced to the level of the plasma-facing surface without breaking vacuum and analyzed using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), ion-scattering and direct recoil spectroscopy, and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) immediately following the plasma discharge. MAPP is designed to operate as a diagnostic within the ∼12 min NSTX minimum between-shot time window to reveal fundamental plasma-surface interactions. Initial calibration demonstrates MAPP's XPS and TDS capabilities.
Tungsten (W) has been selected as the divertor material in ITER based on its promising thermal and mechanical properties. Despite these advantages, continued investigation has revealed W to undergo extreme surface morphology evolution in response to relevant fusion operating conditions. These complications spur the need for further exploration of W and other innovative plasma facing components (PFCs) for future fusion devices. Recent literature has shown that alloying of W with other refractory metals, such as tantalum (Ta), results in the enhancement of key PFC properties including, but not limited to, ductility, hydrogen isotope retention, and helium ion (He + ) radiation tolerance. In the present study, pure W and W-Ta alloys are exposed to simultaneous and sequential low energy, He + and deuterium (D + ) ion beam irradiations at high (1223 K) and low (523 K) temperatures. The goal of this study is to cultivate a complete understanding of the synergistic effects induced by dual and sequential ion irradiation on W and W-Ta alloy surface morphology evolution. For the dual ion beam experiments, W and W-Ta samples were subjected to four different He + : D + ion ratios (100% He + , 60% D + + 40% He + , 90% D + + 10% He + and 100% D + ) having a total constant He + fluence of 6 × 10 24 ion m −2 . The W and W-Ta samples both exhibit the expected damaged surfaces under the 100% He + irradiation, but as the ratio of D + / He + ions increases there is a clear suppression of the surface morphology at high temperatures. This observation is supported by the sequential experiments, which show a similar suppression of surface morphology when W and W-Ta samples are first exposed to low energy He + irradiation and then exposed to subsequent low energy D + irradiation at high temperatures. Interestingly, this morphology suppression is not observed at low temperatures, implying there is a D-W interaction mechanism which is dependent on temperature that is driving the suppression of the microstructure evolution in both the pure W and W-Ta alloys. Minor irradiation tolerance enhancement in the performance of the W-Ta samples is also observed.
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