Simulated Material Erosion from Plasma Facing Components in Tokomak Reactors
Material erosion, melting, splashing, bubbling, and ejection during disruption events in future large tokamak reactors are of serious concern to component longevity. The majority of the heat flux during disruptions will be incident on the divertor, which will be made from tungsten in the future lar...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-512612021-11-02T05:35:01Z Simulated Material Erosion from Plasma Facing Components in Tokomak Reactors Echols, John Russell Materials Science and Engineering Winfrey, Leigh Reynolds, William T. Jr. Hin, Celine Tungsten Fusion Materials High Heat Flux Plasma Facing Components Plasma Facing Materials Material erosion, melting, splashing, bubbling, and ejection during disruption events in future large tokamak reactors are of serious concern to component longevity. The majority of the heat flux during disruptions will be incident on the divertor, which will be made from tungsten in the future large tokamak ITER. Electrothermal plasma sources operating in the confined controlled arc discharge regime produce heat fluxes in the range expected for hard disruptions in future large tokamaks. The radiative heat flux produced inside of the capillary discharge channel is from the formed high density (10^23 - 10^27/m^3) plasma with heat fluxes of up to 125 GW/m^2 over a period of 100s of microseconds, making such sources excellent simulators for ablation studies of plasma-facing materials in tokamaks during hard disruptions. Experiments have been carried out with the PIPE device exposing tungsten to these high heat flux plasmas. SEM images have been taken of the tungsten surfaces, cross sections of tungsten surfaces, and ejected material. Melting and bubble/void formation has been observed on the tungsten surface. The tungsten surface shows evidence of melt-layer flow and the existence of voids and cracks in the exposed material. The ejected material does not show direct evidence of liquid material ejection which would lead to splashing. EDS analysis has been performed on the ejected material which demonstrates a lack of deposited solid tungsten particulates greater than micron size. Master of Science 2015-02-05T09:00:31Z 2015-02-05T09:00:31Z 2015-02-04 Thesis vt_gsexam:4256 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/51261 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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Tungsten Fusion Materials High Heat Flux Plasma Facing Components Plasma Facing Materials |
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Tungsten Fusion Materials High Heat Flux Plasma Facing Components Plasma Facing Materials Echols, John Russell Simulated Material Erosion from Plasma Facing Components in Tokomak Reactors |
description |
Material erosion, melting, splashing, bubbling, and ejection during disruption events in future large tokamak reactors are of serious concern to component longevity. The majority of the heat flux during disruptions will be incident on the divertor, which will be made from tungsten in the future large tokamak ITER. Electrothermal plasma sources operating in the confined controlled arc discharge regime produce heat fluxes in the range expected for hard disruptions in future large tokamaks. The radiative heat flux produced inside of the capillary discharge channel is from the formed high density (10^23 - 10^27/m^3) plasma with heat fluxes of up to 125 GW/m^2 over a period of 100s of microseconds, making such sources excellent simulators for ablation studies of plasma-facing materials in tokamaks during hard disruptions.
Experiments have been carried out with the PIPE device exposing tungsten to these high heat flux plasmas. SEM images have been taken of the tungsten surfaces, cross sections of tungsten surfaces, and ejected material. Melting and bubble/void formation has been observed on the tungsten surface. The tungsten surface shows evidence of melt-layer flow and the existence of voids and cracks in the exposed material. The ejected material does not show direct evidence of liquid material ejection which would lead to splashing. EDS analysis has been performed on the ejected material which demonstrates a lack of deposited solid tungsten particulates greater than micron size. === Master of Science |
author2 |
Materials Science and Engineering |
author_facet |
Materials Science and Engineering Echols, John Russell |
author |
Echols, John Russell |
author_sort |
Echols, John Russell |
title |
Simulated Material Erosion from Plasma Facing Components in Tokomak Reactors |
title_short |
Simulated Material Erosion from Plasma Facing Components in Tokomak Reactors |
title_full |
Simulated Material Erosion from Plasma Facing Components in Tokomak Reactors |
title_fullStr |
Simulated Material Erosion from Plasma Facing Components in Tokomak Reactors |
title_full_unstemmed |
Simulated Material Erosion from Plasma Facing Components in Tokomak Reactors |
title_sort |
simulated material erosion from plasma facing components in tokomak reactors |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/51261 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT echolsjohnrussell simulatedmaterialerosionfromplasmafacingcomponentsintokomakreactors |
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1719492238471331840 |