Abstract In this work we produced tungsten (W) and W oxide (WO<inf>x</inf>) films by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) with the aim of the addressing modifications of structure and morphology that occur after annealing treatments and high-flux deuterium plasma. Thanks to the high flexibility of PLD we produced nanostructured W containing non-bounded oxygen, different types of WO<inf>x</inf> and multilayered films. W coatings are dense, non-porous and exhibit a nanocrystalline structure, resembling the coatings used as first wall in tokamaks. The oxide films are nearly stoichiometric amorphous WO<inf>x</inf> (x = 3) with different morphology from compact to porous. Depending on annealing temperature, nucleation of different crystalline phases (e.g. WO<inf>3</inf>, W<inf>18</inf>O<inf>49</inf>) occurs. Exposure of films to high-flux (~10<sup>24</sup> m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>) deuterium plasmas in Magnum-PSI at different surface temperatures (T<inf>max</inf> = 580 K) determines material modifications at the nanoscale (e.g. nanometric defects) but no delamination. In addition preliminary deuterium retention results are reported.

Thermal annealing and exposure to divertor-like deuterium plasma of tailored tungsten oxide coatings

Dellasega D;Dellasega D;Passoni M;Passoni M
2015

Abstract

Abstract In this work we produced tungsten (W) and W oxide (WOx) films by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) with the aim of the addressing modifications of structure and morphology that occur after annealing treatments and high-flux deuterium plasma. Thanks to the high flexibility of PLD we produced nanostructured W containing non-bounded oxygen, different types of WOx and multilayered films. W coatings are dense, non-porous and exhibit a nanocrystalline structure, resembling the coatings used as first wall in tokamaks. The oxide films are nearly stoichiometric amorphous WOx (x = 3) with different morphology from compact to porous. Depending on annealing temperature, nucleation of different crystalline phases (e.g. WO3, W18O49) occurs. Exposure of films to high-flux (~1024 m-2 s-1) deuterium plasmas in Magnum-PSI at different surface temperatures (Tmax = 580 K) determines material modifications at the nanoscale (e.g. nanometric defects) but no delamination. In addition preliminary deuterium retention results are reported.
2015
PLD
Tungsten oxide
plasma facing components
deuterium retention
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/310708
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