Abstract

The type of induced material damage in the tungsten irradiated by using deuterium ions was investigated for various value of the fluence at low energy. Experiments were carried out in an electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) plasma source that provided an ion flux of 2.8 × 1021D2+/m2s and a sheath energy of 100 eV/D2+ on the tungsten target. The energy of irradiated ions was much smaller than the threshold energy for generating cascade collisional damage (∼ 250 eV) in tungsten and was similar of the plasma at the first wall of KSTAR. The target temperature was kept as 700 − 800 K by using an active cooling system. Secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS) was employed to observe the depth profiles of deuterium. The peak of the trapped deuterium concentration in the irradiated tungsten was located near 16 − 17 nm for 2.0 − 4.0 × 1025D2/m2, which is far deeper than the 1.6 nm for ion implantation at 100 eV/D2+ ions. Thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) data were analyzed to determine the binding energy (Eb = 1.45 eV) of trapped deuterium, which corresponded to an oversaturation-induced vacancy. This observation is very important for understanding the refueling property of the retained deuterium during steady-state fusion plasma operation.

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