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Saturation of tungsten surfaces with hydrogen: A density functional theory study complemented by low energy ion scattering and direct recoil spectroscopy data

Acta Materialia

Piazza, Z.A.; Ajmalghan, M.; Ferro, Y.; Kolasinski, Robert

Herein, we investigate the saturation limits of hydrogen on the (110) and (100) surfaces of tungsten via Density Functional Theory (DFT) and complement our findings with experimental measurements. We present a detailed study of the various stable configurations that hydrogen can adopt upon the surfaces at coverage ratios starting below 1.0, up to the point of their experimental coverage ratios, and beyond. We provide the many low-energy configurations that exist at all coverages along with the energy landscape they form. Our findings allow us to estimate that the saturation limit on each surface exists with one monolayer of hydrogen atoms adsorbed. In the case of (110) this corresponds to a coverage ratio of one hydrogen atom per tungsten atom, while in the case of (100) a full monolayer is present at a coverage ratio of 2.0 hydrogen atoms per tungsten atoms. Preliminary Low Energy Ion Scattering (LEIS) and Direct Recoil Spectroscopy (DRS) measurements complement this work on the W(110) surface. These results and some previously published measurements obtained on the W(100) surface confirm the findings obtained by DFT. In particular, the saturation limits on each surface, the preferred adsorption sites on both surfaces up to saturation, and the reconstruction of the bare and unsaturated (100) surface.

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HyMARC (Sandia) Annual Report

Allendorf, Mark; Stavila, Vitalie; Klebanoff, Leonard E.; Kolasinski, Robert; El Gabaly, Farid; Zhou, Xiaowang; White, James L.

The Sandia HyMARC team continued its development of new synthetic, modeling, and diagnostic tools that are providing new insights into all major classes of storage materials, ranging from relatively simple systems such as PdHx and MgH2, to exceptionally complex ones, such as the metal borohydrides, as well as materials thought to be very well-understood, such as Ti-doped NaAlH4. This unprecedented suite of capabilities, capable of probing all relevant length scales within storage materials, is already having a significant impact, as they are now being used by both Seedling projects and collaborators at other laboratories within HyMARC. We expect this impact to grow as new Seedling projects begin and through collaborations with other scientists outside HyMARC. In the coming year, Sandia efforts will focus on the highest impact problems, in coordination with the other HyMARC National Laboratory partners, to provide the foundational science necessary to accelerate the discovery of new hydrogen storage materials.

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High-flux plasma exposure of ultra-fine grain tungsten

International Journal of Refractory Metals and Hard Materials

Kolasinski, Robert; Buchenauer, D.A.; Doerner, R.P.; Fang, Z.Z.; Ren, C.; Oya, Y.; Michibayashi, K.; Friddle, Raymond; Mills, Bernice E.

In this work, we examine the response of an ultra-fine grained (UFG) tungsten material to high-flux deuterium plasma exposure. UFG tungsten has received considerable interest as a possible plasma-facing material in magnetic confinement fusion devices, in large part because of its improved resistance to neutron damage. However, optimization of the material in this manner may lead to trade-offs in other properties. We address two aspects of the problem in this work: (a) how high-flux plasmas modify the structure of the exposed surface, and (b) how hydrogen isotopes become trapped within the material. The specific UFG tungsten considered here contains 100 nm-width Ti dispersoids (1 wt%) that limit the growth of the W grains to a median size of 960 nm. Metal impurities (Fe, Cr) as well as O were identified within the dispersoids; these species were absent from the W matrix. To simulate relevant particle bombardment conditions, we exposed specimens of the W-Ti material to low energy (100 eV), high-flux (> 1022 m− 2 s− 1) deuterium plasmas in the PISCES-A facility at the University of California, San Diego. To explore different temperature-dependent trapping mechanisms, we considered a range of exposure temperatures between 200 °C and 500 °C. For comparison, we also exposed reference specimens of conventional powder metallurgy warm-rolled and ITER-grade tungsten at 300 °C. Post-mortem focused ion beam profiling and atomic force microscopy of the UFG tungsten revealed no evidence of near-surface bubbles containing high pressure D2 gas, a common surface degradation mechanism associated with plasma exposure. Thermal desorption spectrometry indicated moderately higher trapping of D in the material compared with the reference specimens, though still within the spread of values for different tungsten grades found in the literature database. For the criteria considered here, these results do not indicate any significant obstacles to the potential use of UFG tungsten as a plasma-facing material, although further experimental work is needed to assess material response to transient events and high plasma fluence.

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Understanding H isotope adsorption and absorption of Al-alloys using modeling and experiments (LDRD: #165724)

Ward, Donald K.; Zhou, Xiaowang; Karnesky, Richard A.; Kolasinski, Robert; Foster, Michael E.; Thurmer, Konrad; Chao, Paul; Epperly, Ethan N.; Zimmerman, Jonathan A.; Wong, Bryan M.

Current austenitic stainless steel storage reservoirs for hydrogen isotopes (e.g. deuterium and tritium) have performance and operational life-limiting interactions (e.g. embrittlement) with H-isotopes. Aluminum alloys (e.g.AA2219), alternatively, have very low H-isotope solubilities, suggesting high resistance towards aging vulnerabilities. This report summarizes the work performed during the life of the Lab Directed Research and Development in the Nuclear Weapons investment area (165724), and provides invaluable modeling and experimental insights into the interactions of H isotopes with surfaces and bulk AlCu-alloys. The modeling work establishes and builds a multi-scale framework which includes: a density functional theory informed bond-order potential for classical molecular dynamics (MD), and subsequent use of MD simulations to inform defect level dislocation dynamics models. Furthermore, low energy ion scattering and thermal desorption spectroscopy experiments are performed to validate these models and add greater physical understanding to them.

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A multi-technique analysis of deuterium trapping and near-surface precipitate growth in plasma-exposed tungsten

Journal of Applied Physics

Kolasinski, Robert; Shimada, Masashi; Oya, Yasuhisa; Buchenauer, D.A.; Chikada, Takumi; Cowgill, Donald F.; Donovan, David; Friddle, Raymond; Michibayashi, Katsu; Sato, Misaki

We examine how deuterium becomes trapped in plasma-exposed tungsten and forms near-surface platelet-shaped precipitates. How these bubbles nucleate and grow, as well as the amount of deuterium trapped within, is crucial for interpreting the experimental database. Here, we use a combined experimental/theoretical approach to provide further insight into the underlying physics. With the Tritium Plasma Experiment, we exposed a series of ITER-gradetungsten samples to high flux D plasmas (up to 1.5 × 1022 m-2 s-1) at temperatures ranging between 103 and 554 °C. Retention of deuterium trapped in the bulk, assessed through thermal desorption spectrometry, reached a maximum at 230 °C and diminished rapidly thereafter for T > 300 °C. Post-mortem examination of the surfaces revealed non-uniform growth of bubbles ranging in diameter between 1 and 10 μm over the surface with a clear correlation with grain boundaries. Electron back-scattering diffraction maps over a large area of the surface confirmed this dependence; grains containing bubbles were aligned with a preferred slip vector along the <111> directions. Focused ion beam profiles suggest that these bubbles nucleated as platelets at depths of 200 nm–1 μm beneath the surface and grew as a result of expansion of sub-surface cracks. Furthermore, to estimate the amount of deuterium trapped in these defects relative to other sites within the material, we applied a continuum-scale treatment of hydrogen isotope precipitation. Additionally, we propose a straightforward model of near-surface platelet expansion that reproduces bubble sizes consistent with our measurements. For the tungsten microstructure considered here, we find that bubbles would only weakly affect migration of D into the material, perhaps explaining why deep trapping was observed in prior studies with plasma-exposed neutron-irradiated specimens. We foresee no insurmountable issues that would prevent the theoretical framework developed here from being extended to a broader range of systems where precipitation of insoluble gases in ion beam or plasma-exposed metals is of interest.

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Analysis of hydrogen adsorption and surface binding configuration on tungsten using direct recoil spectrometry

Journal of Nuclear Materials

Kolasinski, Robert; Hammond, K.D.; Whaley, Josh A.; Buchenauer, D.A.; Wirth, B.D.

Abstract In this work, we apply low energy ion beam analysis to examine directly how the adsorbed hydrogen concentration and binding configuration on W(1 0 0) depend on temperature. We exposed the tungsten surface to fluxes of both atomic and molecular H and D. We then probed the H isotopes adsorbed along different crystal directions using 1-2 keV Ne+ ions. At saturation coverage, H occupies two-fold bridge sites on W(1 0 0) at 25°C. The H coverage dramatically changes the behavior of channeled ions, as does reconstruction of the surface W atoms. For the exposure conditions examined here, we find that surface sites remain populated with H until the surface temperature reaches 200°C. After this point, we observe H rapidly desorbing until only a residual concentration remains at 450°C. Development of an efficient atomistic model that accurately reproduces the experimental ion energy spectra and azimuthal variation of recoiled H is underway.

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Results 51–100 of 122
Results 51–100 of 122