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Deciphering the influence of high-flux helium plasma exposure on tungsten nanostructure growth using real-time, in situ spectroscopic ellipsometry

Journal of Applied Physics

Kolasinski, Robert K.; Wong, Chun-Shang W.; Engel, Aaron; Whaley, Josh A.; Allen, Frances I.; Buchenauer, Dean A.

In situ analysis of surfaces during high-flux plasma exposure represents a long-standing challenge in the study of plasma-material interactions. While post-mortem microscopy can provide a detailed picture of structural and compositional changes, in situ techniques can capture the dynamic evolution of the surface. In this study, we demonstrate how spectroscopic ellipsometry can be applied to the real-time characterization of W nanostructure (also known as "fuzz") growth during exposure to low temperature, high-flux He plasmas. Strikingly, over a wide range of sample temperatures and helium fluences, the measured ellipsometric parameters (ψ, Δ) collapse onto a single curve that can be directly correlated with surface morphologies characterized by ex situ helium ion microscopy. The initial variation in the (ψ, Δ) parameters appears to be governed by small changes in surface roughness (<50 nm) produced by helium bubble nucleation and growth, followed by the emergence of 50 nm diameter W tendrils. This basic behavior appears to be reproducible over a wide parameter space, indicating that the spectroscopic ellipsometry may be of general practical use as a diagnostic to study surface morphologies produced by high-flux He implantation in refractory metals. An advantage of the methods outlined here is that they are applicable at low incident ion energies, even below the sputtering threshold. As an example of this application, we apply in situ ellipsometry to examine how W fuzz growth is affected both by varying ion energy and the temperature of the surface.

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The role of H–H interactions and impurities on the structure and energetics of H/Pd(111)

Journal of Chemical Physics

Thurmer, Konrad T.; Bartelt, Norman C.; Whaley, Josh A.; McDaniel, Anthony H.; El Gabaly Marquez, Farid E.

Understanding hydrogen incorporation into palladium requires detailed knowledge of surface and subsurface structure and atomic interactions as surface hydrogen is being embedded. Using density functional theory (DFT), we examine the energies of hydrogen layers of varying coverage adsorbed on Pd(111). Here we find that H–H and H–Pd interactions promote the formation of the well-known ($\sqrt{3}$ x $\sqrt{3}$) phases but also favor an unreported (3 × 3) phase at high H coverages for which we present experimental evidence. We relate the stability of isolated H vacancies of the (3 × 3) phase to the need of H2 molecules to access bare Pd before they can dissociate. Following higher hydrogen dosage, we observe initial steps of hydride formation, starting with small clusters of subsurface hydrogen. The interaction between H and Pd is complicated by the persistent presence of carbon at the surface. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy experiments show that trace amounts of carbon, emerging from the Pd bulk despite many surface cleaning cycles, become mobile enough to repopulate the C-depleted surface at temperatures above 200 K. When exposed to hydrogen, these surface carbon atoms react to form benzene, as evidenced by scanning tunneling microscopy observations interpreted with DFT.

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How oxygen passivates polycrystalline nickel surfaces

Journal of Chemical Physics

Wong, Chun-Shang W.; Wang, Chen S.; Whaley, Josh A.; Sugar, Joshua D.; Kolasinski, Robert K.; Thurmer, Konrad T.

The passivation of polycrystalline nickel surfaces against hydrogen uptake by oxygen is investigated experimentally with low energy ion scattering (LEIS), direct recoil spectroscopy (DRS), and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS). These techniques are highly sensitive to surface hydrogen, allowing the change in hydrogen adsorption in response to varying amounts of oxygen exposure to be measured. The chemical composition of a nickel surface during a mixed oxygen and hydrogen exposure was characterized with LEIS and DRS, while the uptake and activation energies of hydrogen on a nickel surface with preadsorbed oxygen were quantified with TDS. By and large, these measurements of how the oxygen and hydrogen surface coverage varied in response to oxygen exposure were found to be consistent with predictions of a simple site-blocking model. This finding suggests that, despite the complexities that arise due to polycrystallinity, the oxygen-induced passivation of a polycrystalline nickel surface against hydrogen uptake can be approximated by a simple site-blocking model.

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New experimental approach to understanding the chemical reactivity of oxide surfaces

Wong, Chun-Shang W.; Wang, Chen S.; Thurmer, Konrad T.; Whaley, Josh A.; Kolasinski, Robert K.

Metal oxides have been an attractive option for a range of applications, including hydrogen sensors, microelectronics, and catalysis, due to their reactivity and tunability. The properties of metal oxides can vary greatly on their precise surface structure; however, few surface science techniques can achieve atomistic-level determinations of surface structure, and fewer yet can do so for insulator surfaces. Low energy ion beam analysis offers a potential insulator-compatible solution to characterizing the surface structure of metal oxides. As a feasibility study, we apply low energy ion beam analysis to investigate the surface structure of a magnetite single crystal, Fe3O4(100). We obtain multi-angle maps using both forward-scattering low energy ion scattering (LEIS) and backscattering impact-collision ion scattering spectroscopy (ICISS). Both sets of experimental maps have intensity patterns that reflect the symmetries of the Fe3O4(100) surface structure. However, analytical interpretation of these intensity patterns to extract details of the surface structure is significantly more complex than previous LEIS and ICISS structural studies of one-component metal crystals, which had far more symmetries to exploit. To gain further insight into the surface structure, we model our experimental measurements with ion-trajectory tracing simulations using molecular dynamics. Our simulations provide a qualitative indication that our experimental measurements agree better with a subsurface cation vacancy model than a distorted bulk model.

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Effects of nitrogen on tungsten surfaces investigated with low energy ion scattering

Wong, Chun-Shang W.; Whaley, Josh A.; Kolasinski, Robert K.

The effect of nitrogen on the surfaces of polycrystalline ITER-grade tungsten and a tungsten single crystal were studied with low energy ion scattering (LEIS) and direct recoil spectroscopy (DRS). LEIS and DRS measurements on both tungsten surfaces were performed in an ultra-high vacuum system as various quantities of N2 were introduced into the chamber through a variable leak valve. The obtained ion energy spectra reveal that nitrogen was readily adsorbed onto the surface, in turn limiting the amount of hydrogen that could be adsorbed onto the surface. These results not only provide insight into how the presence of nitrogen on tungsten surfaces may play a role in hydrogen adsorption and retention, but also serve to benchmark models being developed to describe the H-N-W system.

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Quantitative investigation of surface structure and interatomic potential with impact-collision ion scattering spectroscopy

Journal of Physics Condensed Matter

Wong, Chun-Shang W.; Kolasinski, Robert K.; Whaley, Josh A.

Helium ion beam interactions with materials have important implications for magnetic confinement fusion, material modification, and helium ion microscopy. These interactions depend on the precise physics of how helium ions channel into the materials, which can vary greatly based on the local crystalline orientation. In this work, we performed a dedicated experiment to investigate helium ion channeling in a well-characterized tungsten single crystal. Time-of-flight impact-collision ion scattering spectroscopy was used to obtain multi-angle maps of the backscattering intensity for 3 keV He+ → W(111). We found that the backscattering intensity profile arising from helium ion channeling could be well described by a shadow cone analysis. This analysis revealed that subsurface W atoms as deep as the ninth monolayer contributed to the backscattering intensity profile. Binary collision approximation simulations were performed with MARLOWE to model the experimental maps with sufficient accuracy to allow for quantitative comparisons using reliability factors. These quantitative comparisons were applied to investigate how the W lattice structure and He-W interatomic potential affect the multi-angle maps.

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In-situ spectroscopic ellipsometry for real-time characterization of the effects of high-flux helium plasmas on tungsten surfaces

Kolasinski, Robert K.; Wong, Chun-Shang W.; Whaley, Josh A.; Allen, Frances I.

Tungsten samples were exposed to He plasmas generated by an RF source (Γi= 3.5 x 1016 He cm-2s-1, ion energy = 92 eV.) The range of exposure conditions selected here is conducive to the growth of nearsurface He bubbles, and at higher fluence, the formation of W nanotendrils ranging between 50 — 100 nm in diameter. The evolution of these surface features was probed using a fixed-angle ellipsometer (280 — 1000 nm wavelength range) with direct line-of-sight to the sample. Over the parameter space explored here, changes in the two angles (p, S) that define the polarization of the reflected light followed a distinct trajectory with increasing plasma fluence. Ex-situ ellipsometry of 22 additional tungsten specimens tested at a wide range of plasma fluences and temperatures mapped onto these in-situ results well. We used helium ion microscopy and focused ion beam profiling to provide a direct calibration of the ellipsometry measurements. Our results indicate that for a reproducible process such as the growth helium-induced surface morphologies, ellipsometry is a practical in-situ diagnostic to study how fusion plasmas modify materials. To study more general effects of plasmas on surfaces, including co-deposition and sputtering, different approaches to modelling the optical properties of the exposed surfaces are also considered.

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Surface Analysis and Hydrogen Permation Measurements for Super-Permeating Membrane Materials

Wong, Chun-Shang W.; Kolasinski, Robert K.; Whaley, Josh A.

In this report, we summarize preliminary surface characterization results for Nb surfaces, using low energy ion scattering, direct recoil spectrometry, and Auger electron spectroscopy. While most surface analysis tools cannot detect hydrogen, the low energy ion beam techniques described here are among the few techniques that are directly sensitive to it. For this study, we examined chemisorption using both molecular and atomic hydrogen (using an heated tungsten capillary to dissociate the hydrogen.) To complement these results, we have been performing ex-situ spectroscopic ellipsometry as a means of detecting the surface oxide.

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Experimental characterization of hydrogen adsorption sites for H/W(111) using low energy ion scattering

Physical Review B

Wong, Chun-Shang W.; Whaley, Josh A.; Bergstrom, Z.J.; Wirth, Brian D.; Kolasinski, Robert K.

Low energy ion scattering (LEIS) and direct recoil spectroscopy (DRS) are among the few experimental techniques that allow for the direct detection of hydrogen on a surface. The interpretation of LEIS and DRS measurements, however, is often made difficult by complexities that can arise from complicated scattering processes. Previously, these complexities were successfully navigated to identify the exact binding configurations of hydrogen on a few surfaces using a simple channeling model for the projectile ion along the surface. For the W(111) surface structure, this simple channeling model breaks down due to the large lateral atomic spacing on the surface and small interlayer spacing. Instead, our observed hydrogen recoil signal can only be explained by considering not just channeling along the surface but also scattering from subsurface atoms. Using this more complete model, together with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we determine that hydrogen adsorbs to the bond-centered site for the W(111)+H(ads) system. Additional MD simulations were performed to further constrain the adsorption site to a height h=1.0±0.1Å and a position dBC=1.6±0.1Å along the bond between neighbors in first and second layers. Our determination of the hydrogen adsorption site is consistent with density functional theory simulation results in the literature.

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Retention properties in displacement damaged ultra-fine grain tungsten exposed to divertor plasma

Nuclear Materials and Energy

Kolasinski, Robert K.; Buchenauer, D.A.; Wampler, William R.; Fang, Zak Z.; Lasnier, Charles J.; Whaley, Josh A.; Watkins, Jonathan G.; Unterberg, Ezekial A.; Guo, Houyang

One of the main advantages of using tungsten (W) as a plasma facing material (PFM) is its low uptake and retention of tritium. However, in high purity (ITER grade) W, hydrogenic retention increases significantly with neutron-induced displacement damage in the W lattice. This experiment examines an alternative W grade PFM, ultra-fine grain (UFG) W, to compare its retention properties with ITER grade W after 12 MeV Si ion displacement damage up to 0.6 dpa (displacements per atom.) Following exposure to plasma in the DIII-D divertor, D retention was then assessed with Nuclear Reaction Analysis (NRA) depth profiling up to 3.5 µm and thermal desorption spectrometry (TDS). Undamaged specimens were also included in our test matrix for comparison. For all samples, D release peaks were observed during TDS at approximately 200 °C and 750 °C. For the ITER-grade W specimens, the intensity of the 750 °C release peak was more pronounced for specimens that had been pre-damaged.

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Results 1–25 of 93
Results 1–25 of 93