Title: Engineered Tungsten Surfaces for IFE Dry Chamber Walls
1Engineered Tungsten Surfaces for IFE Dry Chamber
Walls
Scott ODell
- Plasma Processes Inc.
- 4914 Moores Mill Road
- Huntsville, AL 35811
2Introduction
- Tungsten is an ideal material for armoring IFE
dry chamber walls. - High melting temperature
- Low thermal erosion
- Techniques for accommodating cyclic energy
deposition are needed. - In addition, elimination of helium build-up is
desired to prevent premature armor failure.
3Solution
- Use a functional gradient material to join the
tungsten armor to low activation ferritic steel
walls - Minimize stress at the interface due to CTE
mismatch - Provide short transport path for removal of
helium - Nanometer grain structure to promote grain
boundary diffusion (GB diffusion gt Bulk
diffusion) - Interconnected nanometer size porosity
- PPI and UCSD has been awarded a DOE STTR Grant to
develop Engineered Tungsten Armor using advanced
Vacuum Plasma Spray (VPS) forming techniques
4Vacuum Plasma Spray
- Plasma Processes, Inc. is a small business that
specializes in the development and fabrication of
refractory metals and advanced ceramic materials
for High Heat Flux (HHF) applications. - Innovative Vacuum Plasma Spray (VPS) forming
techniques are used to produced - Complex components to near net shape
- Advanced high temperature coatings and composite
materials - Join materials with dissimilar CTEs
Nano-grained, porous W (1-2 microns thick)
Dense W Functionally Graded to Ferritic Steel
Low Activation Ferritic Steel
5VPS Formed Refractory Metal Components
- Plasma facing component heat sinks with in-situ
formed helical fins - Thin-walled closed end refractory metal
cartridges with ceramic liners for processing
samples in microgravity (leak rate of lt1x10-8
sccs He) - Nozzle inserts to reduce/eliminate throat erosion
solid rocket engines
6Joining of Materials with Dissimilar Coefficients
of Thermal Expansion
- Gradual transition from one material to the other
reduces stress as compared to a typical sharp
interface. - Ability to use coatings that enhance bonding
between the armor and the substrate. - Recently functional gradients have been used to
join thick (3-5mm) VPS W deposits to actively
cooled Cu alloy heat sinks for MFE PFCs.
7Medium Scale MFE PFC Armored with VPS Tungsten
Medium Scale after Armor Castellation (top view
of 0.4m long PFC)
Deposition of VPS W Armor
Close-up of Castellated Armor
8Influence of Particle Size on VPS W
B
C
A
Average starting particle size A) 26µm B)
13µm C) 3µm Micrographs demonstrate by
reducing the starting powder size the grain
structure of the resulting deposit can be reduced.
9Ultrafine Grained VPS W
- Submicron W powder (0.5µm)
- Transition metal carbides to pin the grain
boundaries (HfC) - VPS formed W components with ultrafine grained
structures have been produced.
10Porous VPS Tungsten
- By controlling the deposition parameters, porous
deposits can be produced. - Porous W deposits between dense W layers have
been produced for use as helium cooled heat
sinks. - Helium flow tests have demonstrated the porosity
is interconnected. - Size of porosity is highly dependent on the size
of the starting powder.
11He Cooled W Heat Sink
12Engineered W Surfaces for IFE Dry Chamber Walls
- Develop a preliminary model to aid in the design
and optimization of engineered W - Develop VPS fabrication techniques based on
functional gradient materials for joining
engineered W to low activation ferritic steel - Produce engineered W surfaces comprised of
nanometer size grains and interconnected
nanometer porosity to eliminate He entrapment - Demonstrate migration of helium
- through the engineered tungsten surface
- Produce samples for thermal cycle
- testing and analysis
13Tungsten Brush Armor for MFE PFCs
- PPI, SNLs and Boeing have worked to develop W
brush armor for MFE PFCs - PPI was the first to produce medium scale PFCs
with W brush armor (PW-8 and PW-14) - 32mm x 100mm armor area comprised of 10mm tall W
rods - Medium scale mockups have been thermal response
tested to 23 MW/m2 - Survived 500 thermal cycles at 20 MW/m2
14Insulator Coating for the University of
Washingtons HIT Device
- In a recent effort for the University of
Washington, PPI applied an alumina dielectric
coating on plasma facing surfaces of the Helicity
Injected Torous (HIT) device.
HIT-SI components before deposition of
dielectric coating ..
The Helicity Injected Torus with Steady Inductive
Helicity Injection (HIT- SI) is a new spheromak
under construction at the University of
Washington. HIT- SI has several unique features,
the most notable being the bow tie cross-
section of the confinement region and the
presence of two semi- toroidal helicity injectors
at each end.
Inner cone after deposition of dielectric
alumina coating