Nature Communications (Apr 2024)

Isotope engineering achieved by local coordination design in Ti-Pd co-doped ZrCo-based alloys

  • Jiacheng Qi,
  • Xu Huang,
  • Xuezhang Xiao,
  • Xinyi Zhang,
  • Panpan Zhou,
  • Shuoqing Zhang,
  • Ruhong Li,
  • Huaqin Kou,
  • Fei Jiang,
  • Yong Yao,
  • Jiangfeng Song,
  • Xingwen Feng,
  • Yan Shi,
  • Wenhua Luo,
  • Lixin Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47250-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Deuterium/Tritium (D/T) handling in defined proportions are pivotal to maintain steady-state operation for fusion reactors. However, the hydrogen isotope effect in metal-hydrogen systems always disturbs precise D/T ratio control. Here, we reveal the dominance of kinetic isotope effect during desorption. To reconcile the thermodynamic stability and isotope effect, we demonstrate a quantitative indicator of T gap and further a local coordination design strategy that comprises thermodynamic destabilization with vibration enhancement of interstitial isotopes for isotope engineering. Based on theoretical screening analysis, an optimized Ti-Pd co-doped Zr0.8Ti0.2Co0.8Pd0.2 alloy is designed and prepared. Compared to ZrCo alloy, the optimal alloy enables consistent isotope delivery together with a three-fold lower T gap, a five-fold lower energy barrier difference, a one-third lower isotopic composition deviation during desorption and an over two-fold higher cycling capacity. This work provides insights into the interaction between alloy and hydrogen isotopes, thus opening up feasible approaches to support high-performance fusion reactors.