The Materials Test Station:An Accelerator Driven Neutron Source
for Fusion Materials Testing
Eric Pitcher
Presented at:
Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop
July 10-12, 2012
LA-UR-12-22739
Slide 2Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
The need for a fusion relevant intense neutron source is well established
• 2007 FESAC (Greenwald) Report – Identified a neutron irradiation facility as one of nine initiatives – Recommended assessing the potential for alternative facilities to reduce or
possibly eliminate the need for the US to participate as a full partner in the International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility (IFMIF)
• 2009 FES Research Needs Workshop (ReNeW)– Advocated a fusion-relevant neutron source to be an essential mission
requirement
• 2012 FESAC Opportunities for Fusion Materials Science and Technology Research Now and During the ITER Era
– “The lack of an intense fusion relevant neutron source for conducting accelerated experiments is the largest obstacle to achieving a rigorous scientific understanding and developing effective strategies for mitigating neutron-induced material degradation.”
The LANL Materials Test Station is a moderate cost option that can largely satisfy this mission need.The LANL Materials Test Station is a moderate cost option that can largely satisfy this mission need.
Slide 3Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
Materials Test Station Mission: Irradiate nuclear fuels and materials in a fast neutron spectrum
• The DOE Office of Nuclear Energy (DOE-NE) has funded the conceptual design of the Materials Test Station (MTS) as a fast spectrum nuclear fuels and materials test bed
• Once completed, the MTS will be the only fast neutron spectrum irradiation capability outside of Russia and Asia
• The MTS can provide the US with a fast spectrum test capability in 4 years for about $85M
• The MTS neutron irradiation environment is also suitable for fusion materials testing
Slide 4Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
MTS will be built at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE), a multidisciplinary National User Facility
• Lujan Neutron Scattering Center– Materials science– Biology– Nuclear cross sections
• Weapons Neutron Research Facility– Nuclear cross sections– semiconductor testing
• Proton Radiography– dynamic imaging
• Ultra-Cold Neutron Source– nuclear physics
• Isotope Production Facility– medical & research isotopes
• Materials Test Station(under design)
– fuels and materials testing
Slide 5Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
The MTS will be driven by a 1-MW proton beam delivered by the LANSCE accelerator
• MTS will be built in an existing experimental hall
• Use of existing materials and infrastructure greatly reduces capital costs compared to a green field
Slide 6Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
MTS neutron flux and energy spectrum is similar to a fast reactor, with an added high-energy tail
MTS flux level will be half of the world’s most intense research fast reactors.
Facility Peak Fast Flux (1015 n/cm2/s)
MTS (USA) 1.3
BOR-60 (Russia) 2.8
CEFR (China) 2.5
NEUTRON ENERGY SPECTRUM SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF THE FAST NEUTRON FLUX
Slide 7Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
Figures of merit for fusion materials testing
• Irradiation temperature– 300˚C to 1000˚C range, controllable to ±10˚C
• He/dpa ratio– “Fusion relevant” range is 10 – 15 appm He/dpa
• Damage rate– Desirable to reach a total dose exceeding 100 dpa in a few years
• Irradiation volume– Sufficient to simultaneously irradiate hundreds of test specimens
• Nuclear recoil spectrum similar to fusion reactor 1st wall
• Similar evolution in elemental composition with dose
With the exception of damage rate, the MTS substantially satisfies these figures of merit.With the exception of damage rate, the MTS substantially satisfies these figures of merit.
Slide 8Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
MTS produces a broad range of He/dpa ratios
• Peak dpa rate is 32 dpa/fpy or 17 dpa/year (50% LANSCE availability)
• There is an irradiation volume of about 100 cm3 where samples will receive 7 dpa/year or more with fusion-relevant He/dpa ratios
“fusion relevant”He/dpa
ratio from 10 to 15 appm/dpa
fuels irradiation region
materials irradiation region
Slide 9Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
Different facilities exhibit distinct features in their neutron and nuclear recoil energy spectra
10-6
10-4
10-2
100
102
104
10-5 10-4 10-3 10-2 10-1 100 101
dσ / ( / )dT b MeV
, ( )nuclear recoil energy T MeV
1 fusion reactor st wall
MTS fast reactor
IFMIF
0
1E+14
2E+14
3E+14
4E+14
5E+14
6E+14
7E+14
10-3 10-2 10-1 100 101 102 103
neutron lethargy flux (n.cm
–2.s
–1)
neutron energy (MeV)
fusion reactor 1st wall
MTS
fast reactor
IFMIF
Low-energy portion of the neutron and nuclear recoil spectra are similar for fusion reactor, fast reactor, and MTS.
(DEMO)
Slide 10Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
The damage production function W(T) of a fusion reactor 1st wall and MTS match in the critical region below 50 keV
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
10-3 10-2 10-1 100 101
W(T)
nuclear recoil energy, T (MeV)
fusion reactor 1st wall
MTSfast reactor
IFMIF
Isolated defectswith higher rate of survivability
Sub-cascade production
Slide 11Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
Major elemental composition evolution in MTS is similar to that for a fusion reactor first wall
reflector
bac
ksto
p
materials samples
spallation target
fuel samples
spallation target
materials samples
reflector
proton beam
proton beam
mask
materials region tally volumes
EUROFER97 irradiated to 200 dpa
Slide 12Sixth US-PRC Magnetic Fusion Collaboration Workshop, San Diego, July 10-12, 2012
Summary
• The irradiation environment in MTS is appropriate for fusion materials testing of steel alloys with respect to:
– irradiation temperature– He/dpa ratio– nuclear recoil spectrum– change in elemental composition with dose
• Peak damage rate for iron alloys is 17 dpa/calendar year
• Irradiation volume is sufficient for the simultaneous irradiation of hundreds of miniature test specimens
• Conceptual design completed last year, awaiting DOE approval
• MTS provides the US a cost effective alternative to joining the ITER Broader Approach