학술논문

Damage Morphologies in Targets Exposed to a New Plasma Deflagration Accelerator for ELM Simulation
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on. 44(9):1534-1540 Sep, 2016
Subject
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Plasmas
Probes
Electrodes
Heating
Plasma measurements
Surface morphology
Inductors
Divertor material
erosion
first wall
off-normal events
plasma jet
plasma–material interaction (PMI)
plasma–material interface
Language
ISSN
0093-3813
1939-9375
Abstract
Transient events in fusion power plants such as DEMO and ITER are known to pose a severe threat to plasma facing components (PFCs) due to melting and erosion after repeated edge localized mode (ELM) loads. In situ experimental testing of potential PFC materials at fusion relevant conditions is difficult and expensive, and as a result plasma devices capable of replicating the desired transient conditions are of increasing interest. At Stanford University, an experimental facility designed to mimic the heat flux, particle fluence, and other key characteristics of ELMs and disruption events in a controlled setting has been developed. A pulsed plasma accelerator operating in the deflagration mode is used to generate high-velocity (40–100 km/s) directed plasma jets that are stagnated on target material samples. In this paper, we present probe data characterizing the plasma parameters of the accelerated plume using hydrogen as the working gas, as well as preliminary target studies of silicon and copper witness plates exposed to pulses at various total and peak shot energies. Results from the probe analysis indicate achieved energy fluxes and heat flux parameters that are ELM-like, and the observed linearly correlated damage morphologies on the witness plates indicate that initial surface roughness plays a significant role in the growth characteristics of surface damage patterns. These results lay the groundwork for future studies of ELM-like loading on reactor-relevant materials using the Stanford plasma accelerator facility.