AIP Advances (May 2017)

Direct depth distribution measurement of deuterium in bulk tungsten exposed to high-flux plasma

  • C. N. Taylor,
  • M. Shimada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4983384
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
pp. 055305 – 055305-6

Abstract

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Understanding tritium retention and permeation in plasma-facing components is critical for fusion safety and fuel cycle control. Glow discharge optical emission spectroscopy (GD-OES) is shown to be an effective tool to reveal the depth profile of deuterium in tungsten. Results confirm the detection of deuterium. A ∼46 μm depth profile revealed that the deuterium content decreased precipitously in the first 7 μm, and detectable amounts were observed to depths in excess of 20 μm. The large probing depth of GD-OES (up to 100s of μm) enables studies not previously accessible to the more conventional techniques for investigating deuterium retention. Of particular applicability is the use of GD-OES to measure the depth profile for experiments where high deuterium concentration in the bulk material is expected: deuterium retention in neutron irradiated materials, and ultra-high deuterium fluences in burning plasma environment.