Carbon film growth and hydrogenic retention of tungsten exposed to carbon-seeded high density deuterium plasmas
2010
Abstract Tungsten (W) targets have been exposed to high density ( n e ⩽ 4 × 10 19 m −3 ), low temperature ( T e ⩽ 3 eV) CH 4 -seeded deuterium (D) plasma in Pilot-PSI. The surface temperature of the target was ∼1220 K at the center and decreased radially to ∼650 K at the edges. Carbon film growth was found to only occur in regions where there was a clear CII emission line, corresponding to regions in the plasma with T e ⩾ 2 eV. The maximum film thickness was ∼2.1 μm after a plasma exposure time of 120 s. 3 He nuclear reaction (NRA) analysis and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) determine that the presence of a thin carbon film dominates the hydrogenic retention properties of the W substrate. Thermal desorption spectroscopy analysis shows retention increasing roughly linearly with incident plasma fluence. NRA measures a C/D ratio of ∼0.002 in these films deposited at high surface temperatures.
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