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 (Corresponding author)
  • , F. Feng
  • , J. Wang
  • , Y. Tan
  • , T.W. Morgan
  • , G.H. Lu
  • , X. Ye
  • , B. Yan
  • , J. Song
  • , M. Xu
  • , X.R. Duan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)
322 Downloads (Pure)

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
Number of pages12
JournalNuclear Fusion
Volume61
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China with Grant Nos. 11905045 and 11975092. Z. Chen acknowledges the support from the Innovation Program of SWIP under Grant No. 201901XWCXRC007. J. Song acknowledges the support from the National Key R&D Program of China under Contract No. 2018YFE0312100.

Funding

This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China with Grant Nos. 11905045 and 11975092. Z. Chen acknowledges the support from the Innovation Program of SWIP under Grant No. 201901XWCXRC007. J. Song acknowledges the support from the National Key R&D Program of China under Contract No. 2018YFE0312100.

Keywords

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

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