4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Void migration, coalescence and swelling in fusion materials

Journal

FUSION ENGINEERING AND DESIGN
Volume 66-68, Issue -, Pages 253-257

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/S0920-3796(03)00299-0

Keywords

void migration; plasma-facing armour; fusion materials

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A recent analysis of the migration of voids and bubbles, produced in neutron irradiated fusion materials, is outlined. The migration, brought about by thermal hopping of atoms on the surface of a void, is normally a random Brownian motion but, in a temperature gradient, can be slightly biassed up the gradient. Two effects of such migrations are the transport of voids and trapped transmutation helium atoms to grain boundaries, where embrittlement may result; and the coalescence of migrating voids, which reduces the number of non-dislocation sites available for the capture of knock-on point defects and thereby enables the dislocation bias process to maintain void swelling. A selection of candidate fusion power plant armour and structural metals have been analysed. The metals most resistant to void migration and its effects are tungsten and molybdenum. Steel and beryllium are least so and vanadium is intermediate. (C) 2003 G.A. Cottrell. Published by Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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