Measuring helium nano-bubble formation in tungsten with grazing-incidence small angle X-ray scattering
Abstract
The behaviour of helium in tungsten is an important concern for
the fusion materials community. Under helium plasma exposure,
small nano-scale bubbles form beneath the material surface as
helium precipitates from the tungsten matrix. Under certain
conditions this can lead to the subsequent formation of a surface
“nano-fuzz”, though the mechanisms of this process are not
presently understood.
For sub-surface nano-bubble formation transmission electron
microscopy (TEM) has been the most widely used technique. While
certainly a powerful technique, TEM suffers from a number of
significant drawbacks: sample preparation is difficult and
destructive, and there are sampling limitations as
nano-structures must be located and characterised individually.
This makes quantitative characterisation of nano-scale
modification in tungsten challenging, which in turn makes it
difficult to perform systematic studies on the effects of factors
such as temperature and plasma composition on nano-scale
modification.
Here, Grazing Incidence Small Angle X-ray Scattering (GISAXS) is
presented as a powerful addition to the field of fusion
materials. With GISAXS, one can measure the X-ray scattering from
nano-scale features throughout a relatively large volume,
allowing information about full nano-bubble size distributions to
be obtained from a simple, non-destructive measurement. Where it
typically takes days or weeks to prepare a sample and study it
under TEM, GISAXS measurements can be performed in a matter of
minutes, and the data analysis performed autonomously by a
computer in hours.
This thesis describes the work establishing GISAXS as a viable
technique for fusion materials. A GISAXS pattern fitting model
was first developed, and then validated via comparison between
GISAXS and TEM measurements of helium induced nano-bubble
formation in tungsten exposed to a helium discharge in the large
helical device. Under these conditions, nano-bubbles were found
to follow an approximately exponential diameter distribution,
with a mean nano-bubble diameters μ=0.596±0.001 nm and
μ=0.68±0.04 nm computed for GISAXS and TEM, respectively. Depth
distributions were also approximately exponential, with average
bubble depths estimated at τ=9.1±0.4 nm and τ=8.4±0.5 for
GISAXS and TEM, respectively.
GISAXS was then applied to study the effects of plasma fluence,
sample temperature and large transient heat and particle loads on
nano-bubble formation. Nano-bubble sizes were found to saturate
with increasing fluence at fluences less than 2.7×〖10〗^24
He/m^2 at 473 K. At higher temperatures larger nano-bubbles are
able to form, suggesting a shift in the growth mechanisms,
possibly from vacancy capture to bubble coalescence. Evidence is
also presented which indicates that nano-bubble size
distributions are qualitatively different for tungsten exposed to
transient heat and particle loads due edge localised modes (ELMs)
in the DIII-D tokamak, with a relatively large population of
smaller (0.5-1 nm) nano-bubbles forming in this case. This is
posited to be a consequence of rapid precipitation due to either
extremely high helium concentrations during the ELM, or rapid
cooling after it.
Finally, synergistic effects between plasma composition and
sample temperature are explored to determine which factors are
most relevant for hydrogen and helium retention. Here, evidence
has been found that helium ions from the plasma require a minimum
energy of 9.0±1.4 eV in order to be implanted into tungsten.
This was the dominant factor governing helium retention in this
experiment. On the other hand, sample temperature is the dominant
factor for hydrogen retention.
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