The design and implementation of future flowing liquid-lithium plasma-facing components (LLPFCs) will be dependent on several factors. Of course, one of the most important is the need to be able to deal with high heat fluxes incident on the surface of the LLPFCs, but there are also several other important liquid-metal behaviors that have been identified for their critical impact on the feasibility of a LLPFC. One of these is the ability to constantly wet 100% of the plasma-facing component area and the best way to achieve that. Another key point is knowing and understanding the erosion and corrosion of the surfaces subject to a flowing liquid-lithium system and the ability for hydrogen and helium uptake by the system. The Center for Plasma ...
Liquid metal plasma-facing components (PFCs) provide numerous potential advantages over solid-materi...
To develop realistic liquid lithium divertors for future fusion reactors, this paper aims to improve...
The application of liquid metal, especially liquid lithium, as a plasma facing component (PFC) has t...
The design and implementation of future flowing liquid-lithium plasma-facing components (LLPFCs) wil...
The use of low atomic number liquid metals has been shown to have the potential to solve many of the...
As the fusion research community trends toward building larger and hotter devices, evidence points t...
The concept of using molten metal as a plasma facing material (PFM) has been widely considered, and ...
Liquid metal walls have been proposed to address the first wall challenge for fusion reactors. The L...
Flowing liquid metal PFCs offer an attractive solution to the problems currently facing conventional...
Liquid lithium (Li) can partly ameliorate lifetime and power-exhaust issues of plasma facing compone...
Liquid metal plasma-facing components (PFCs) provide numerous potential advantages over solid-materi...
To develop realistic liquid lithium divertors for future fusion reactors, this paper aims to improve...
The application of liquid metal, especially liquid lithium, as a plasma facing component (PFC) has t...
The design and implementation of future flowing liquid-lithium plasma-facing components (LLPFCs) wil...
The use of low atomic number liquid metals has been shown to have the potential to solve many of the...
As the fusion research community trends toward building larger and hotter devices, evidence points t...
The concept of using molten metal as a plasma facing material (PFM) has been widely considered, and ...
Liquid metal walls have been proposed to address the first wall challenge for fusion reactors. The L...
Flowing liquid metal PFCs offer an attractive solution to the problems currently facing conventional...
Liquid lithium (Li) can partly ameliorate lifetime and power-exhaust issues of plasma facing compone...
Liquid metal plasma-facing components (PFCs) provide numerous potential advantages over solid-materi...
To develop realistic liquid lithium divertors for future fusion reactors, this paper aims to improve...
The application of liquid metal, especially liquid lithium, as a plasma facing component (PFC) has t...