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G. Valles

Bio: G. Valles is an academic researcher from Technical University of Madrid. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tungsten & Kinetic Monte Carlo. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications receiving 141 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of grain boundaries (GBs) on the radiation-induced defect evolution and on H retention at 300 K, both experimentally and by computer simulations, was studied.

59 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of a high grain boundary density on the amount, size and distribution of defects produced by pulsed helium (625 keV) irradiation in tungsten has been studied.

41 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used object kinetic Monte Carlo simulations (pseudo-3D simulations) parameterized from first principles to understand the temperature dependence of He and point defect clustering, cluster growth, and detrapping reactions.

39 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the MMonCa (Modular Monte Carlo simulator) to simulate the evolution of radiation-induced damage inside solids in large temporal and space scales.
Abstract: Helium retention in irradiated tungsten leads to swelling, pore formation, sample exfoliation and embrittlement with deleterious consequences in many applications. In particular, the use of tungsten in future nuclear fusion plants is proposed due to its good refractory properties. However, serious concerns about tungsten survivability stems from the fact that it must withstand severe irradiation conditions. In magnetic fusion as well as in inertial fusion (particularly with direct drive targets), tungsten components will be exposed to low and high energy ion irradiation (helium), respectively. A common feature is that the most detrimental situations will take place in pulsed mode, i.e., high flux irradiation. There is increasing evidence of a correlation between a high helium flux and an enhancement of detrimental effects on tungsten. Nevertheless, the nature of these effects is not well understood due to the subtleties imposed by the exact temperature profile evolution, ion energy, pulse duration, existence of impurities and simultaneous irradiation with other species. Object Kinetic Monte Carlo is the technique of choice to simulate the evolution of radiation-induced damage inside solids in large temporal and space scales. We have used the recently developed code MMonCa (Modular Monte Carlo simulator), presented at COSIRES 2012 for the first time, to study He retention (and in general defect evolution) in tungsten samples irradiated with high intensity helium pulses. The code simulates the interactions among a large variety of defects and during the irradiation stage and the subsequent annealing steps. The results show that the pulsed mode leads to significantly higher He retention at temperatures higher than 700 K. In this paper we discuss the process of He retention in terms of trap evolution. In addition, we discuss the implications of these findings for inertial fusion.

15 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized and analyzed the current understandings on the influence of various types of internal defect sinks on reduction of radiation damage in primarily nanostructured metallic materials, and partially on nanoceramic materials.

288 citations

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TL;DR: A review of computer simulation techniques for studying radiation effects in materials from 1946 until 2018 can be found in this paper, where the focus is on methods that either deal directly with the primary radiation damage generation event, or with such defects or phase changes that typically occur due to radiation.

123 citations

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TL;DR: A review of recent efforts in computational modeling of W both as a plasmafacing material exposed to He deposition as well as a bulk material subjected to fast neutron irradiation is provided in this article.
Abstract: Under the anticipated operating conditions for demonstration magnetic fusion reactors beyond ITER, structural and plasma facing materials will be exposed to unprecedented conditions of irradiation, heat flux, and temperature. While such extreme environments remain inaccessible experimentally, computational modeling and simulation can provide qualitative and quantitative insights into materials response and complement the available experimental measurements with carefully validated predictions. For plasma facing components such as the first wall and the divertor, tungsten (W) has been selected as the leading candidate material due to its superior hightemperature and irradiation properties, as well as for its low retention of implanted tritium. In this paper we provide a review of recent efforts in computational modeling of W both as a plasmafacing material exposed to He deposition as well as a bulk material subjected to fast neutron irradiation. We use a multiscale modeling approach –commonly used as the materials modeling paradigm– to define the outline of the paper and highlight recent advances using several classes of techniques and their interconnection. We highlight several of the most salient findings obtained via computational modeling and point out a number of remaining challenges and future research directions.

118 citations

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TL;DR: The mechanical properties of the SLM-produced tungsten are comparable to that produced by the conventional fabrication methods, with hardness values exceeding 460 HV0.05 and an ultimate compressive strength of about 1 GPa, which offers new potential applications of refractory metals in additive manufacturing.

117 citations