In Vacuo Analysis of LTX Wall Samples Exposed to Lithium and Implications for High-Z Plasma-Facing Components in NSTX-U
Authors: R. Kaita, M. Lucia, J. P. Allain, F.
Bedoya, R. Bell, D. Boyle,
A. Capece, M. Jaworski, B. E. Koel, R.
Majeski, J. Roszell,
J. Schmitt, F. Scotti, C. H. Skinner, V.
Soukhanovskii
Abstract: The application of lithium to
plasma-facing components (PFCs) has long been used as a technique
for wall conditioning in magnetic confinement devices to improve
plasma performance. Determining the characteristics of PFCs at the
time of exposure to the plasma, however, is difficult because they
can only be analyzed after venting the vacuum vessel and removing
them at the end of an operational period. The Materials Analysis
and Particle Probe (MAPP) addresses this problem by enabling PFC
samples to be exposed to plasmas, and then withdrawn into an
analysis chamber without breaking vacuum. The MAPP system was used
to introduce samples that matched the metallic PFCs of the Lithium
Tokamak Experiment (LTX). Lithium that was subsequently evaporated
onto the walls also covered the MAPP samples, which were then
subject to LTX discharges. In vacuo extraction and analysis of the
samples indicated that lithium oxide formed on the PFCs, but
improved plasma performance persisted in LTX. The reduced
recycling this suggests is consistent with separate surface
science experiments that demonstrated deuterium retention in the
presence of lithium oxide films. Since oxygen decreases the
thermal stability of the deuterium in the film, the release of
deuterium was observed below the lithium deuteride dissociation
temperature. This may explain what occurred when lithium was
applied to the surface of the NSTX Liquid Lithium Divertor (LLD).
The LLD had segments with individual heaters, and the
deuterium-alpha emission was clearly lower in the cooler regions.
The plan for NSTX-U is to replace the graphite tiles with high-Z
PFCs, and apply lithium to their surfaces with lithium
evaporation. Experiments with lithium coatings on such PFCs
suggest that deuterium could still be retained if lithium
compounds form, but limiting their surface temperatures may be
necessary.
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