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AbstractAbstract
[en] The plasma-wall interaction region of a fusion device provides the interface between the hot core plasma and the material surfaces. To obtain acceptably low levels of erosion from these surfaces requires most of the power leaving the core to be radiated. This is accomplished in existing devices by encouraging plasma detachment, in which the hot plasma arriving in the region is cooled by volume recombination and ion-neutral momentum transfer with a dense population of neutrals recycled from the surface. The result is a low temperature (1 eV< Te<5 eV), dense (ne>1019 m-3) but weakly ionized (n0>1020 m-3, ne/n0<0.1) plasma found nowhere else in the fusion environment. This plasma provides many of the conditions found in industrial plasmas exploiting plasma chemistry and the presence of carbon in the region (in the form of carbon-fibre composite used in the plasma facing materials) can result in the formation of deposited hydrocarbon films. The plasma-wall interaction region is therefore among the most difficult in fusion to model, requiring an understanding of atomic, molecular and surface physics issues
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Source
25. international conference on phenomena in ionized gases; Nagoya (Japan); 17-22 Jul 2001; S0963-0252(02)34482-7; Available online at http://stacks.iop.org/0963-0252/11/A80/ps2c12.pdf or at the Web site for the journal Plasma Sources Science and Technology (ISSN 1361-6595) http://www.iop.org/; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Record Type
Journal Article
Literature Type
Conference
Journal
Plasma Sources Science and Technology; ISSN 0963-0252;
; v. 11(3A); p. A80-A85

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