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Hydrogen isotopes are retained in materials for fusion power applications, changing both hydrogen embrittlement and tritium inventory as the microstructure undergoes irradiation damage. But modelling of highly damaged materials - exposed to over 0.1 displacements per atom (dpa) - where asymptotic saturation is observed, for example tungsten facing the plasma in a fusion tokamak reactor, is difficult because a highly damaged microstructure cannot be treated as weakly interacting isolated defect traps. In this paper we develop computational techniques to find the defect content in highly irradiated materials without adjustable parameters. First we show how to generate converged high dose (>1 dpa) microstructures using a combination of the creation-relaxation algorithm and molecular dynamics simulations of collision cascades. Then we make robust estimates of point defects and void regions with simple developments of the Wigner-Seitz decomposition of lattice sites. We use our estimates of the void surface area to predict the deuterium retention capacity of tungsten as a function of dose. This is then compared to 3He nuclear reaction analysis (NRA) measurements of tungsten samples self-irradiated at 290 K to different damage doses and exposed to deuterium plasma at low energy at 370 K. We show that our simulated microstructures give an excellent match to the experimental data, with both model and experiment showing 1.5-2.0 at.% deuterium retained in tungsten in the limit of high dose.
Using _in situ_ transmission electron microscopy (TEM), we have observed nanometre scale dislocation loops formed when an ultra-high-purity tungsten foil is irradiated with a very low fluence of self-ions. Analysis of the TEM images has revealed the
The changing thermal conductivity of an irradiated material is among the principal design considerations for any nuclear reactor, but at present few models are capable of predicting these changes starting from an arbitrary atomistic model. Here we pr
Deuterium(D) retention behavior in tungsten(W) exposed to deuterium plasma and gas was studied by means of thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS): deuterium plasma exposure in which W was exposed to D plamsa with 35 eV/D at 393 K to the fluence of 3.8
Understanding defect production and evolution under irradiation is a long-standing multi-scale problem. Conventionally, experimental examination of irradiation-induced defects (IIDs) has mainly relied on transmission electron microscopy (TEM), which
Tungsten is the main candidate material for plasma-facing armour components in future fusion reactors. In-service, fusion neutron irradiation creates lattice defects through collision cascades. Helium, injected from plasma, aggravates damage by incre