In-situ elemental and chemical state characterization of lithiated surfaces under energetic particle bombardment.

ORAL

Abstract

Lithium has been considered a potentially viable plasma-facing surface enhancing the operational performance of fusion devices such as: TFTR and NSTX. Solid and liquid lithium has been studied extensively both in its erosion and hydrogen-retaining properties. However, questions still remain on the role of lithiated surfaces and multi-material interactions at the plasma edge. Lithiated surfaces include: liquid Li on metal substrates, Li alloys and Li coatings. The main processes studied here (e.g. erosion, H-retention) consist of spatial scales from a few monolayers at the vacuum/film interface to 100's nm deep. Techniques used include: low-energy ion scattering spectroscopy (LEISS), direct recoil spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and in-situ erosion diagnosis. LEISS diagnoses the first 2-3 monolayers. XPS gives chemical state data 10-nm into the lithiated surface. Three cases are presented in this paper: liquid Li, alloyed Li and Li coatings under D irradiation.

Authors

  • Jean-Paul Allain

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • S. Harilal

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • M. Nieto

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • M.R. Hendricks

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Ahmed Hassanein

    Argonne National Laboratory