Review of Recent Progress in Plasma-Facing Material Joints and Composites in the FRONTIER U.S.-Japan Collaboration
边疆
复合材料
材料科学
等离子体
物理
历史
核物理学
考古
作者
Lauren M. Garrison,Yutai Katoh,Tatsuya Hinoki,Naoyuki Hashimoto,John Echols,Josina W. Geringer,Nathan Reid,Jean Paul Allain,Bin Cheng,Daniel Dorow‐Gerspach,Vishnu Ganesh,H. Gietl,Samuel A. Humphry-Baker,Eric Lang,Ian McCue,J. Riesch,L.L. Snead,G. D. W. Smith,Jason R. Trelewicz,Ying Yang
The plasma-facing components (PFCs) of future fusion reactors will have intricate structures and require multiple materials because no one material can simultaneously satisfy all the requirements of the component. The dissimilar material joints in PFCs must withstand extreme thermal and stress gradients under neutron irradiation. The Fusion Research Oriented to Neutron Irradiation and Tritium Behavior at Material Interfaces (FRONTIER) U.S.-Japan collaboration seeks to explore and explain the behavior of internal solid interfaces in PFCs under neutron irradiation. The first step of the collaboration was to identify the leading PFCs that should be studied further and prepare them for the next step, which will include neutron irradiation. Different strategies for material development are being pursued worldwide to produce robust PFCs. Here, an overview is presented of some of the most promising materials in the areas of copper alloys, tungsten-copper composites, tungsten-steel composites, additively manufactured tungsten, particle-reinforced tungsten, and tungsten and SiC fiber composites. Each material's fabrication and benefits are described, and some discussion of remaining questions is given.