Abstract

An overview of recent Plasma-Material Interactions (PMI) research at the DIII-D tokamak using the Divertor Material Evaluation System (DiMES) is presented. The DiMES manipulator allows for exposure of material samples in the lower divertor of DIII-D under well-diagnosed ITER-relevant plasma conditions. Plasma parameters during the exposures are characterized by an extensive diagnostic suite including a number of spectroscopic diagnostics, Langmuir probes, IR imaging, and Divertor Thomson Scattering. Post-mortem measurements of net erosion/deposition on the samples are done by Ion Beam Analysis, and results are modelled by the ERO and REDEP/WBC codes with plasma background reproduced by OEDGE/DIVIMP modelling based on experimental inputs. This article highlights experiments studying sputtering erosion, re-deposition and migration of high-Z elements, mostly tungsten and molybdenum, as well as some alternative materials. Results are generally encouraging for use of high-Z PFCs in ITER and beyond, showing high redeposition and reduced net sputter erosion. Two methods of high-Z PFC surface erosion control, with (i) external electrical biasing and (ii) local gas injection, are also discussed. These techniques may find applications in the future devices.

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