Abstract

The fusion plasma, with a typical temperature of 10 keV, has to be brought into contact with a physical wall in order to remove the helium produced and drain the excess energy in the fusion plasma. The fusion plasma is far too hot to be brought into direct contact with a physical wall. It would degrade the wall and the debris from the wall would extinguish the plasma. Therefore, schemes are developed to cool down the plasma locally before it impacts on a physical surface. The resulting plasma wall-interaction in ITER is facing several challenges including surface erosion, material redeposition and tritium retention. In JET facility both beryllium and carbon are used together as plasma facing materials, and the resultant surfaces show considerable mixing between the two elements. In this work a first XPS characterisation has been performed on the surface of several PFC (plasma facing components) samples obtained from various JET tiles from the Mk II GB divertor in JET. The substrates of the tiles are CFC, and the deposited films have various D/C ratios depending on the position in the tokamak. Ion beam analysis shows that the D/C ratio is ∼1 in the shadowed areas and Be/C ∼1–2 in the plasma-exposed regions of the inner divertor. These values could give rise to the formation of beryllium carbides, and indications of a carbide component are found in the XPS spectra. The processes for material migration and the morphology of the deposits are discussed.

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