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On the use of rhodium mirrors for optical diagnostics in ITER.

Authors :
Mertens, Philippe
Boman, Romain
Dickheuer, Sven
Krasikov, Yury
Krimmer, Andreas
Leichtle, Dieter
Liegeois, Kim
Linsmeier, Christian
Litnovsky, Andrey
Marchuk, Oleksander
Rasinski, Marcin
De Bock, Maarten
Source :
Fusion Engineering & Design. Sep2019:Part B, Vol. 146, p2514-2518. 5p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The first mirrors of optical diagnostics in ITER are exposed to high radiation and fluxes of particles which escape the plasma, in the order of 1020 m−2s−1. At the position of the mirror, the flux may still reach about 1018 m−2s−1. First mirrors are thus the most vulnerable in-vessel optical components, being subject to erosion, esp. by fast charge-exchange neutrals, or to deposition of impurities at flux rates which can reach 0.05 nm/s. The material selected for the reflecting surface must combine a high optical reflectivity in a wide spectral range and a sufficient resistance to physical sputtering during normal operation and during mirror cleaning discharges, if any is installed. Rhodium (103 Rh) was identified early as a possible or even promising candidate. It combines several attractive properties, for instance a mass which leads in most cases to low sputtering yields together with an optical reflectance (R Rh ≈ 75 %) which is much higher than of some other options. R Rh is insensitive to large temperature changes. Rhodium is fairly inert and its low oxidation is an appreciable advantage in case of steam ingress events. The core-plasma CXRS diagnostic in ITER (UPP 3) have now turned to Rh as a baseline. The aim is to procure monocrystalline rhodium (SC-Rh) to mitigate the increase of the diffuse reflection with the damage due to physical sputtering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09203796
Volume :
146
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Fusion Engineering & Design
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
138692931
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fusengdes.2019.04.031