American Nuclear Society
Home

Home / Publications / Journals / Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 64 / Number 2

Plasma- and Gas-Driven Hydrogen Isotope Permeation Through the First Wall of a Magnetic Fusion Power Reactor

Yoshi Hirooka, Haishan Zhou, Naoko Ashikawa, Takeo Muroga, Akio Sagara

Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 64 / Number 2 / August 2013 / Pages 345-350

Safety, Environment, and Tritium Handling / Proceedings of the Twentieth Topical Meeting on the Technology of Fusion Energy (TOFE-2012) (Part 1), Nashville, Tennessee, August 27-31, 2012 / dx.doi.org/10.13182/FST12-514

The first wall of a magnetic fusion power reactor is defined essentially as the plasma-facing walls of blankets. For the high temperature operation of self-cooled breeder blankets, the first wall is often designed to be less than 1cm thick to reduce mechanical stresses and as a result will be subjected to bi-directional hydrogen permeation by two distinctive mechanisms; in one direction by edge plasma-driven and in the other direction by bred tritium gas-driven permeation. Using a laboratory-scale plasma device and a one-dimensional diffusion model, plasma-driven and gas-driven hydrogen permeation behavior has been investigated under some of the conditions relevant to FLiBe-employed blankets. For a 5mm F82H membrane, the plasma-driven permeation flux at ~500 eC and the gas-driven hydrogen permeation flux at ~350 CC have been measured to be of the orders of 1013 H-atoms/cm2/s and 1014 H-atoms/cm2/s, respectively. From these data one predicts that gas-driven permeation could dominate the hydrogen isotope transport through the first wall.