4.7 Article

SIMS and HR-XPS characterization of lithiated graphite from the magnetic fusion device RFX-mod

Journal

APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE
Volume 567, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsusc.2021.150830

Keywords

Lithium; Graphite; Li conditioning; SIMS; XPS; Plasma facing components

Funding

  1. Program in Plasma Science and Technology at Princeton University
  2. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-09CH1146]

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Lithium wall conditioning using pellet injection and evaporation in the RFX-mod device showed that lithium evaporation resulted in highly localized lithium deposition with specific features on HR-XPS peaks, indicating hydrogenation of fresh graphite during He plasma discharge exposure. This has implications for density control and the selection of lithium conditioning techniques in magnetic fusion devices.
Lithium wall conditioning has improved the performance of many magnetic fusion devices. Li conditioning in the RFX-mod device was performed by: (1) a single Li pellet injector and (2) a multi-Li pellet injector during He plasma discharges; (3) a Li evaporator after He glow discharge cleaning and He plasma discharge exposure. This report compares the spatial and depth distributions of Li deposited on polycrystalline graphite witness samples at different locations in RFX-mod and the elemental and chemical compositions of the resulting surfaces. The sample surfaces were analyzed ex situ using secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and high-resolution X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (HR-XPS). The results showed that Li pellet injection provided a relatively uniform toroidal coverage while Li evaporation produced highly localized Li deposition. A Li 1s HR-XPS peak at 56.5 eV binding energy (BE) characteristic of lithium-intercalated graphite was only observed with the sample exposed to Li evaporation. All of the samples exhibited a HR-XPS C 1s peak at 285.1-285.2 eV BE that is largely attributed to hydrogenated graphite. This finding suggests that hydrogenation of fresh graphite occurs during He plasma discharge exposures. Our results have implications for density control and the selection of Li conditioning techniques in magnetic fusion devices.

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