4.6 Article

Deuterium Retention and Release Behavior from Beryllium Co-Deposited Layers at Distinct Ar/D Ratio

Journal

COATINGS
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/coatings11121443

Keywords

Be-D layers; deuterium desorption; D flow; D retention

Funding

  1. Romanian Ministry of Education and research, CNCS-UEFISCDI, within PNCDI III [PN-III-P1-1.1-PD-2019-1024]
  2. Euratom research and training programme 2014-2018 [633053]
  3. Euratom research and training programme 2019-2020 [633053]
  4. EUROfusion Consortium

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Beryllium-deuterium co-deposited layers were obtained using DC magnetron sputtering technique with varying Ar/D-2 gas mixture compositions. Increasing deuterium content during deposition increased deuterium retention in beryllium layers up to 300%, primarily in low activation binding states. The layers release the majority of deuterium (above 99.99%) at temperatures lower than 700 K. The morphology of the layers is influenced by the substrate type and roughness.
Beryllium-deuterium co-deposited layers were obtained using DC magnetron sputtering technique by varying the Ar/D-2 gas mixture composition (10/1; 5/1; 2/1 and 1:1) at a constant deposition rate of 0.06 nm/s, 343 K substrate temperature and 2 Pa gas pressure. The surface morphology of the layers was analyzed using Scanning Electron Microscopy and the layer crystalline structure was analyzed by X-ray diffraction. Rutherford backscattering spectrometry was employed to determine the chemical composition of the layers. D trapping states and inventory quantification were performed using thermal desorption spectroscopy. The morphology of the layers is not influenced by the Ar/D-2 gas mixture composition but by the substrate type and roughness. The increase of the D-2 content during the deposition leads to the deposition of Be-D amorphous layers and also reduces the layer thickness by decreasing the sputtering yield due to the poisoning of the Be target. The D retention in the layers is dominated by the D trapping in low activation binding states and the increase of D-2 flow during deposition leads to a significant build-up of deuterium in these states. Increase of deuterium flow during deposition consequently leads to an increase of D retention in the beryllium layers up to 300%. The resulted Be-D layers release the majority of their D (above 99.99%) at temperatures lower than 700 K.

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