Since 18 of December 2019 conferences.iaea.org uses Nucleus credentials. Visit our help pages for information on how to Register and Sign-in using Nucleus.

22–27 Oct 2018
Mahatma Mandir Conference Centre
Asia/Kolkata timezone
CONFERENCE MATERIAL NOW AVAILABLE!

A Transmission Electron Microscopy Investigation of Defects Induced in Tungsten Foils by Gold (Au) and Boron (B) Ion Irradiation

23 Oct 2018, 14:00
4h 45m
Mahatma Mandir Conference Centre

Mahatma Mandir Conference Centre

Gandhinagar (nearest Airport: Ahmedabad), India
Poster P2 Posters

Speaker

Dr Prashant Sharma (ITER-India, IPR Gandhinagar)

Description

Tungsten is a promising candidate for first-wall material in fusion reactors and its use as a plasma-facing material is being investigated in both tokamaks as well as laboratory experiments [1, 2]. In fusion environment tungsten will be exposed to neutron, helium and hydrogen isotope implantation along with the heat flux which will lead to material damage. Irradiation by charged particles such as H, D, T, He, Au, W etc. is employed to surrogate the experiment of high energy and high flux neutron irradiation in tungsten. Present work concerns the study of ion mass in meso-scale defects created in tungsten using Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) after irradiated by (1) high energy heavy mass gold (Au of 80MeV) and (2) low mass boron (B of 10MeV) ions with a fluence of 1.3x1014 cm-2. Prior to irradiation tungsten foil samples of 100 µm thickness (99.96 % pure), procured from Princeton scientific corp. USA, and were recrystallized at 1838 K under 10-3 mbar base pressure in 200 mbar Ar+ 8% H2 environment. Defects created by Au and B ions irradiation in the recrystallized foil were characterized for the types of defect such as defect clusters, dislocation lines, loops etc., and are quantified in terms of dislocation line length, dislocation loop size and their densities using transmission electron microscopy. The small defect clusters in Au irradiated samples and dislocations segments and dislocation loops were observed in B irradiated samples. Furthermore, the Au ion irradiation has led to the formation of dislocation lines density lesser than that of B irradiated foil. [1] E. E. Bloom, Structural Materials For Fusion Reactors, Nuclear Fusion, 30, (9), 1879-1896, 1990. [2] M . Rubel, Structure Materials in Fusion Reactors: Issues Related to Tritium, Radioactivity and Radiation-Induced Effects, Transactions of Fusion Science and Technology, 53, 459-467, 2008.
Country or International Organization India
Paper Number EX/P2-10

Primary author

Dr Prashant Sharma (ITER-India, IPR Gandhinagar)

Co-authors

Dr Anil Tyagi (ITER-India, Institute for Plasma Research) Dr Asha Attri (ITER-India, IPR) Dr K.B. KHAN (Radio Metallurgy Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai) Dr P N Maya (ITER-India, Institute for Plasma Research, A-29, GIDC Electronic Estate, Sector-25 Gandhinagar, 382016,India) Prof. P.K. BAJPAI (Guru Ghasidas Vishwavidyalaya, Koni, Bilaspu) Dr PRAKASH RAOLE (Institute for Plasma Research, Gandhinagar) Dr Pawan Kumar KULRIYA (3Inter-University Accelerator Centre Aruna Asaf Ali Marg, New Delhi) Mr S. MISHRA (Radio Metallurgy Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai) Mr Satyaprasad AKKIREDDY (Institute for Plasma Research, Bhat, Gandhinagar, Gujarat, India) Prof. Shishir P. DESHPANDE (Institute for Plasma Reserch, Gandhinagar) Prof. T. TRIVEDI (Guru Ghasidas Vishwavidyalaya, Koni, Bilaspur)

Presentation materials