(Zoom link corrected) CMSP Webinar (Atomistic Simulation Seminar Series) TOMORROW 11 May at 11:00, Prof. Duc Nguyen-Manh
CMSP Seminars Secretariat
OnlineCMSP at ictp.it
Tue May 10 11:18:25 CEST 2022
------------------------------------------------
Atomistic Simulation Webinar Series
------------------------------------------------
Zoom link to advance registration:
https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwkceyspzIoHteHurD9ZNF_8C5Yz0CPVHre
** * * TOMORROW Wednesday, 11 May 2022 at 11:00**CET* * **
Speaker:*Prof. Duc Nguyen-Manh *(United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority)
Title:***Challenges and perspectives in predicting phase stability and
radiation damages in plasma-facing materials for fusion-power plant
application
*
Abstract:
“We say that we will put the sun into a box. The idea is pretty. The
problem is, we don’t know how to make the box” (Pierre Gilles de Gennes).
Nuclear fusion - the joining together of atomic nuclei of light
elements such as the reaction between two hydrogen isotopes, deuterium
(D) and Tritium (T) to form heavier helium atoms - is the process by
which vast amounts of energy is produced in stars like our sun. If it
can be harnessed on Earth it has the potential deliver a nearly
unlimited and safe source of energy which does not produce the
environmentally damaging CO2 emissions that are released by burning
traditional fossil fuels. To achieve nuclear fusion in a machine on
Earth, extraordinarily high temperatures of around 150 million degrees
Celsius are needed, about 10 times higher than the temperature of the
sun's core. Most recently, the UK-based Joint European Torus (JET)
laboratory in Culham, has made a breakthrough in the quest to develop
practical energy fusion in producing 59 MJ of energy (more than double
what was achieved in the 1997 test) but over only 5 seconds.
The major technological challenges of fusion energy are intimately
linked with the availability of suitable materials capable of reliably
withstanding the extremely severe operational conditions of fusion
reactors. The energetic spectrum associated with the D-T fusion neutrons
(14.1MeV compared to<2MeV on average for fission neutrons) releases
significant amounts of hydrogen and helium as transmutation products
that might lead to a degradation of materials after a few years of
operation. Structural materials development, together with research on
functional materials capable of sustaining unprecedented power densities
during plasma operation in a fusion reactor, have been the subject of
decades of worldwide research efforts underpinning the present fusion
materials research programme. Overcoming the lack of a fusion-relevant
neutron source for materials testing is an essential pending step in
fusion roadmaps.
At the same time, fundamental understanding of the transient materials
changes due to fusion neutron loading pose scientific and predictive
computational challenges that require the development of an integrated
framework to support the design effort for future fusion power plants.
In this talk, we highlight the recent advances in developing an
integrated multi-scale modelling based on first-principles calculations
to investigate phase stability under and microstructure evolution of
plasma-facing material components such as reduced-activation
ferritic/martensitic (RAFM) steels for the first wall and W&W alloys for
the divertor [1-5]. More attention will be focusing on our recent
development of constrained thermodynamic approach in predicting free
energies of the various phases in the presence of radiation-induced
defects (saturated vacancies, interstitials, and precipitates) with the
final microstructure of combinations of phases giving the lowest free
energy. The model has been successfully employed not only to understand
the origin of microstructures decorated by transmutation products in
neutron irradiated W [6-7] but also to predict new W-based based
high-entropy alloys with outstanding radiation resistance [8].
[1] D. Nguyen-Manh et al., Phys. Rev. B, 73, 010201 (2006); PRB, 80,
104440 (2009)
[2] D. Nguyen-Manh et al., Progress in Materials Science., 52, 255 (2007).
[3] D. Nguyen-Manh et al., J. Mater. Science, 47, 21 (2012)
[4] D. Nguyen-Manh et al., Annal of Nuclear Energy, 77, 246 (2015);
NIMB, 352, 86 (2015)
[5] K. Arakawa et al., Nature Materials, 19, 508 (2020)
[6] D. Nguyen-Manh et al, Phys. Rev. Mater., 5, 065401 (2021)
[7] M. J. Lloyd et al., Materialia, 22, 101370 (2022)
[8] O. Et-Atwani et al., Science Advances, 5, eaav2002 (2019)
----
CMSP Seminars support:OnlineCMSP at ictp.it
CMSP, Condensed Matter & Statistical Physics Section
http://www.ictp.it/research/cmsp.aspx
The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics
https://www.ictp.it/
----
More information about the science-ts
mailing list