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Recent progress of thick tungsten coating prepared by chemical vapor deposition as the plasma-facing material

  • Z. Chen
  • , Y. Li
  • , L. Cheng
  • , Z. Wang
  • , Y. Lian
  • , X. Liu*
  • , F. Feng
  • , J. Wang
  • , Y. Tan
  • , T. W. Morgan
  • , G. H. Lu
  • , X. Ye
  • , B. Yan
  • , J. Song
  • , M. Xu
  • , X. R. Duan
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Southwestern Institute of Physics
  • Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research
  • Science and Technology on Surface Physics and Chemistry Laboratory
  • Xiamen Tungsten Co., Ltd.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) is a promising technique for the preparation ofW-based plasma-facing materials (PFMs). An overview of the microstructure, chemical composition, thermal conductivity, thermal stability, thermal shock performance under disruption-like and edge localized mode-like transient heat load, and neutron irradiation performance of CVD-W has been given in our previous work. However, for fusion applications, additional properties need to be assessed. To this end, deuterium (D) permeability, D plasma irradiation performance, and thermal fatigue resistance of CVD-W were investigated in this work. The results showed that the D permeability of CVD-W in the temperature range of 973-1173 K was larger than that of the commercial pureW, which was related to the columnar grain structure of CVD-W. Additionally, both CVD-W and commercial pure W were exposed to D plasma up to a fluence of 1 × 1026m-2. Compared to commercial pure W, CVD-W exhibited a mitigated blistering behavior and lower D total retention, which could be attributed to its strong [001] crystallographic texture along the thickness direction and a lower number of defect density (e.g. grain boundaries). CVD-W and commercial pureW were also exposed to steady-state and transient heat load simultaneously, leading to a base surface temperature and surface temperature increase of about 953-1473 K and 250-300 K, respectively. A strong grain orientation dependence of the surface degradation induced by the combined heat load has been found. Consequently, CVD-W exhibited a much more uniform plastic deformation than pureW, and no surface cracks along grain boundaries were observed in CVD-W. Finally, the industrial-scale production of CVD-W-based PFMs and mockups was demonstrated. This work paves the way for the fusion applications of thick CVD-W coatings.

Original languageEnglish
Article number126024
JournalNuclear Fusion
Volume61
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2021

Keywords

  • CVD-W
  • D plasma
  • Heat load
  • Mockups
  • PFM

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