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J. Roth 1 With the help of and discussions with

D/T retention in W, Be and C. J. Roth 1 With the help of and discussions with K. Schmid 1 , M. Mayer 1 , A. Kirschner 2 , A. Kukushkin 2 1 M ax-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik, EURATOM Association, Garching, Germany

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J. Roth 1 With the help of and discussions with

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  1. D/T retention in W, Be and C J. Roth1 With the help of and discussions with K. Schmid1, M. Mayer1, A. Kirschner2, A. Kukushkin2 1 Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik, EURATOM Association, Garching, Germany 2 Institut für Plasmaphysik, FZ Juelich, EURATOM Association, Jülich, Germany 3ITER Joint Central Team, Garching Joint Worksite, Garching, Germany Outline: Implantation into CFC, W and Be materials Present knowledge about co-deposition Total inventories dependent on fluence and time Relevance for ITER

  2. Carbon fibre composites

  3. CFC-material irradiated with 200 eV D ions exposed to 100 eV D plasma Dependence on fluence

  4. CFC-material: irradiated with 200 eV D ions exposed to 100 eV D plasma

  5. Tungsten

  6. W: exposed to high-flux (1024 D/m2s) 200 eV D plasma Dependence on temperature at 2x1024 D/m2s Single crystalline W Polycrystalline W

  7. W:irradiated with 200 eV D ions Polycrystalline W Retention is strongly dependent on material structure. Largest retention in plasma-sprayed coatings

  8. Beryllium

  9. Be:: irradiated with 200 and 1000 eV D ions No deep diffusion Saturation of retention

  10. Be: mainly review of data from 1990’s From review of R. Anderl et al., JNM 273 (1999) 1 D retention saturates. For 1 keV D ion irradiation, saturation is reached at a fluence of 1023 D/m2. For D ion irradiation at low temperatures (below 400 K), deuterium is trapped in the implantation zone. When the irradiation temperature increases, the D retention decreases.

  11. Comparison

  12. Total retention of D

  13. M. Baldwin, K. Schmid et al., 16th PSI Portland (2004) 1 Be Balden, Mayer, Roth (1999) C 0.1 D/C, D/W W M. Mayer et al. (1996) B 0.01 400 600 800 1000 Temperature (K) Temperature (K) Co-deposition in fusion devices contaminated clean Be If C and O fluxes are comparable to Be fluxes, the layer will grow as a BeO with incorporated C and D. D concentrations vary between ~0.3 D/Be at 300 K and ~0.01 D/Be at 600 K.

  14. Retention due to co-deposition • Andreas Kirschner, ERO • Assumptions: • T in carbon layers: T/C = 0.05 at target, T/C = 0.5 in remote areas T in beryllium layers: T/Be = 0.05 (PISCES)

  15. Be concentrations after wall erosion Andrei Kukushkin, B2/Eirene Klaus Schmid, DIVIMP 0.2% Be ITPA Tarragona:

  16. Total retention with ITER material mix • Initially, implantation into CFC and Be dominates • The T limit is reached due to co-deposition with C and/or Be • W not important for inventory

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