Abstract

A set of stainless steel (SS) and molybdenum mirror samples located in the divertor and at the outer mid-plane of the vessel were exposed in JET from 2005 to 2007. A selection of these mirror samples with well adhered deposits (i.e. not flaking) of up to a few hundred nanometers in thickness and with Be/C ratios ranging from 0 to ∼1 have been cleaned using a laser system developed at CEA, Saclay. Following laser cleaning the recovered reflectivity was generally better in the infrared than the visible spectrum, with recovery of up to 90% of the initial reflectivity being obtained at 1600nm for both Mo and SS mirrors falling as low as 20–30% of initial reflectivity at a wavelength of 400nm for some SS mirrors, rising to ∼80% for Mo mirrors. Some deposit remained on the mirrors after the cleaning trials.

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