Publication | Open Access
Hydrogen isotope exchange in tungsten during annealing in hydrogen atmosphere
22
Citations
23
References
2018
Year
The radiological safety of the future thermonuclear fusion devices depends critically on the total tritium inventory in the plasma-facing components. The planned method to remove tritium from the ITER reactor tungsten divertor is to perform vacuum baking. We show that tritium removal from tungsten can be enhanced by the isotope exchange mechanism by doing the baking in H-2 atmosphere. The results show that the retained deuterium from 30 keV implantation can be expected to drop almost to zero after 24h annealing at 250 degrees C in H-2 atmosphere. Annealing in vacuum requires temperatures above 400 degrees C for close to zero retention.
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