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@ARTICLE{Matveev:862841,
author = {Matveev, D. and Hansen, P. and Dittmar, T. and Koslowski,
H. R. and Linsmeier, Ch.},
title = {{M}odeling of {H}/{D} isotope-exchange in crystalline
beryllium},
journal = {Nuclear materials and energy},
volume = {20},
issn = {2352-1791},
address = {Amsterdam [u.a.]},
publisher = {Elsevier},
reportid = {FZJ-2019-03040},
pages = {100682 -},
year = {2019},
abstract = {A reaction-diffusion model with surface occupation
dependent desorption [D. Matveev et al., Nucl. Instr. Meth.
B 430 (2018) 23–30] has been updated to handle multiple
hydrogen species to simulate hydrogen/deuterium
isotope-exchange experiments performed on polycrystalline
beryllium samples under ultra-high vacuum laboratory
conditions. In the experiments subsequent exposures of a
sample to hydrogen and deuterium ion beams in direct and
reverse implantation order were followed by thermal
desorption spectroscopy measurements under a constant
heating rate of 0.7 K/s. The recorded signals of masses 2
to 4 (H2, HD and D2) indicate that the second implanted
isotope dominates clearly the low temperature release stage
( ≈ 450 K), while both isotopes show a comparable
contribution to the high temperature desorption stage
( ≈ 700 K) with only minor effect of the
implantation order attributed to a slightly deeper
penetration of deuterium compared to hydrogen. Simulations
of the implantation and subsequent thermal desorption of
hydrogen isotopes are performed to assess the atomic
processes behind the isotope-exchange. Simulations were
performed under the assumption that the low temperature
release stage is attributed to hydrogen/deuterium atoms
retained on effective open surfaces (e.g. interconnected
porosity) represented in the simulations by a surface with
an effective surface area exceeding the nominal exposed
surface area by a factor up to 100. Kinetic de-trapping from
vacancies with multiple trapping levels and enhanced
desorption at surface coverages close to saturation are
addressed in the model as possible mechanisms promoting the
isotope-exchange. Simulation results suggest the
applicability of the model to describe isotope-exchange
processes in crystalline beryllium and give a qualitative
explanation of the observed experimental facts.},
cin = {IEK-4},
ddc = {624},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)IEK-4-20101013},
pnm = {174 - Plasma-Wall-Interaction (POF3-174)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF3-174},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
UT = {WOS:000500930800016},
doi = {10.1016/j.nme.2019.100682},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/862841},
}