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Tungsten Armor Engineering:

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University of California Los Angeles, CA. 11th High Average Power Laser Program Workshop ... Pulse One. End of Pulse Two. T=0.4sec. Annealing. High Temperature ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tungsten Armor Engineering:


1
  • Tungsten Armor Engineering
  • Debris Ions and He-Bubbles
  • Carbon Implantation
  • Roughening Mechanisms
  • Shahram Sharafat, Nasr Ghoniem, Qiyang Hu, Jaafar
    El-Awady, Sauvik Benarjee, and Michael Andersen
  • University of California Los Angeles, CA.

11th High Average Power Laser Program
WorkshopLawrence Livermore National
LaboratoryLivermore, CAJune 20-21, 2005
2
TOPIC
  • Debris Ions and Helium Bubbles
  • Carbon Implantation
  • Roughening Mechanisms

3
Debris Ions and He-Bubbles
He-Implantation Experiments Ions - He plus D,
P (planned)
HAPL W-Armor Exposure Ions - He plus P, D, T,
C, Au, and Pt
Do we need to consider these in He implantation
experiments ?
- How much damage do they cause ?- What is
their effect on He-bubbles ?- Do we need to
modify experiments ?
Use the HEROS code to investigate
4
Density Profiles (SRIM)
DEBRIS-IONS
5
Low- and High Yield Target Debris- and Burn Ions
Based on THREAT SPECTRA Based on largest
percentage of ions
6
Self-Damage (Defect) Rate Profiles (SRIM)
7
Comparison of Damage Rates
8
HEROS Damage and Implantation Profiles
SRIM Profiles
HEROS Input Profiles
Implantation Density
Burn
ImplantationDebris (apa/s)
Ion Self-Damage
Damage Debris (dpa/s)
Burn
9
HEROS Bubble Concentration including Debris
Damage
Temperature Rise 2200 oC Chamber Radius
10.1 m 2 Consecutive Shots (5Hz)
Bubble Concentration in W (/cm3)
Green ? Annealing Temp. Drop Red ? Implantation
2 Consecutive Shots
10
Bubble Concentration Including Debris Damage
Burn
T10-10sec
T10-8sec
T0.4?sec
T0.7?sec
Debris
Annealing
Effect of D, T, C, Au Simultaneous Self-Damage)
T1.5?sec
T2.1?sec
T0.8?sec
T0.8msec
High Temperature Annealing
End of Implantation
Annealing
Burn-2nd Pulse
Debris- 2nd Pulse
Annealing-2nd Pulse
T0.4sec
T0.2s0.7?s
T0.2s 2.1?s
T0.2sec
End of Pulse Two
End of Pulse One
End of Burn of Pulse Two
End of Debris of Pulse Two
11
Importance of Simultaneous Debris-Ion Damage
  • Large displacement damage is caused by Debris
    Ions (C, Au, P, D, T , Pt)
  • Factor of 10 X He-Self Damage
  • Results in SUPERSATURATION of vacancies
  • Supersaturation of vacancies provides larger
    number of He-trap sites

Poster by Q. Hu on He-Modeling
Schematic of He-Bubble Resolution
  • High Debris-Ion Damage Rates
  • Momentum transfer of Excess Interstitials
  • Collisional Displacement of He from bubbles
    Bubble RE-SOLUTION
  • Increases effective DHe coef.
  • Rapid temperature rise (2200 oC) facilitates
    annealing of He-Vac-Clusters and small Bubbles.
  • Combination of high debris ion damage plus high
    temperature rise significantly enhances
    Helium-recycling

CollisionCascade (SIA)
HeliumBubble
Self-Interstitial W-atom Produced by Debris
(PKA)
Smaller Helium Bubbledecorated withHe-Vacancy
Clusters
12
TOPIC
  • Debris Ions and Helium Bubbles
  • Carbon Implantation Mechanical Properties
    Helium Retention Tritium Retention
  • Roughening Mechanisms

13
Debris Carbon Implantation Profile (SRIM 2003)
  • Assuming No Carbon Diffusion (154 MJ Target)

14
Debris Carbon Implantation Profile (SRIM 2003)
  • Assuming COMPLETE Carbon Diffusion (5 Hz 154 MJ
    Target)

This slide was not shown
15
Debris Carbon Implantation Profile (SRIM 2003)
  • Assuming COMPLETE Carbon Diffusion (10 Hz 154 MJ
    Target)

This slide was not shown
16
Temperatures
Slide from Jakes Presentation HAPL NRL
2005 Additions/Modifications appear in RED
Carbon arrives (max implantation depth 1 um)
  • 154 MJ
  • 7 m
  • 250 microns tungsten
  • 3 mm steel

This slide was not shown
17
Impact of WC-Layer Thermo-Mechanical Props.
  • Above 940 oC various W-C compounds can form
    depending on temperature and molar ratios.
  • Thermo-Mechanical Impact
  • WC W2C Tmelting 2800 oC
  • Tm of WC 600 oC less than W
  • WC is a ceramic? more brittle
  • WC effects crack behavior

Demetriou, Ghoniem, Lavine, Acta Materialia.
(2002)
18
Impact of WC-Layer Helium Release
  • Could not find helium release data for WC.
  • At elevated temperatures He retention in SiC and
    B4C is low (implanted He E5 keV He1e18
    /m2-s Temp RT Hino-JNM-1999).
  • U-Pu-Oxide fuels show significant fission product
    (gas) migration.
  • Migration of Helium bubbles through WC needs to
    be verified experimentally.

T. Hino, JNM (1999)
Inoue, JNM (2004)
19
Impact of Carbon Implantation Tritium Retention
  • High T implantation 2x1017 T/m2 per shot
    for a R10.1 m chamber.
  • Effects of Carbon on T retention at High
    Temperatures?

Irradiated tungsten at 653K with carbon
concentration as a parameter (1 keV 7 1024 H/m2
Ueda,2004.
20
TOPIC
  • Debris Ions and Helium Bubbles
  • Carbon Implantation
  • Roughening Failure Mechanisms Effect
    of Hydrogen

21
TOPICS
  • Roughening induced Failure Mechanisms

Surface Cracks in Polycrystalline Tungsten
Margevicius, 1999
Poster by J.El-Ewady on Bond-Strength Measurements
22
Roughening Mechanisms Effect of Hydrogen
  • About 4x1017 (TD)/m2 per shot for a 10.1 m
    chamber
  • Cyclic heat load tests with a hydrogen beam and a
    comparable electron beam on CVD-tungsten.
  • Hydrogen surface damage more severe than that by
    the electron beam.
  • Cracked surface at all temperatures from 300 C to
    1600 C.

Experimental Setup of CVD Tungsten on Copper
H-Irradiation Conditions
Tamura, JNM, 2005
HAPL 3000 shots (10 min)
23
TOPICS
  • Effect of Hydrogen at 1600oC

Tamura, JNM, 2005
Surface morphology of the CVD Tungsten 110 shots
with a peak temperatures of 1600 C. Small pores
are observed at the coating surface (b) after
hydrogen beam irradiation.
24
Summary and Conclusions
  • DEBRIS ION Self-DAMAGE
  • C-, Au-, and Pt Debris ions cause large damage
    within the first 2-um.
  • Large damage assists in RE-SOUTION of helium
    bubbles
  • - Facilitates efficient He-recycling.
  • A high helium He-Recycling coefficient may be
    attainable.
  • Needs experimental verification ?
  • CARBON
  • Implantation of C into W is significant
    Localized C/ W gt 1 in a few days
  • Effects on mechanical performance of W-armor
    needs investigation.
  • Effect of Carbon on P-, D-, and T retention has
    not been addressed.
  • May be critical for W-armor reliability.
  • ROUGHENING Mechanism of armor failure
    as it relates to roughening will be
    experimentally determined and theoretically
    modeled. Role of hydrogen implantation
    on surface cracking needs
    consideration.
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