Document details

Production of Cu/Diamond composites for first-wall heat sinks

Author(s): Nunes, D. cv logo 1 ; Correia, J. Brito cv logo 2 ; Carvalho, P. A. cv logo 3 ; Shohoji, Nobumitsu cv logo 4 ; Silva, C. cv logo 5 ; Fernandes, H. cv logo 6 ; Alves, L. C. cv logo 7 ; Hanada, K. cv logo 8 ; Osawa, E. cv logo 9

Date: 2010

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.9/1146

Origin: Repositório do LNEG

Subject(s): Copper; Nanodiamond; Interface reinforcement; Carbide formation; Spark plasma sintering


Description
Due to their suitable thermal conductivity and strength copper-based materials have been considered appropriate heat sinks for first wall panels in nuclear fusion devices. However, increased thermal conductivity and mechanical strength are demanded and the concept of property tailoring involved in the design of metal matrix composites advocates for the potential of nanodiamond dispersions in copper. Copper-nanodiamond composite materials can be produced by mechanical alloying followed by a consolidation operation. Yet, this powder metallurgy route poses several challenges: nanodiamond presents intrinsically difficult bonding with copper; contamination by milling media must be closely monitored; and full densification and microstructural homogeneity should be obtained with consolidation. The present line of work is aimed at an optimization of the processing conditions of Cu-nanodiamond composites. The challenges mentioned above have been addressed, respectively, by incorporating chromium in the matrix to form a stable carbide interlayer binding the two components; by assessing the contamination originating from the milling operation through particle-induced X-ray emission spectroscopy; and by comparing the densification obtained by spark plasma sintering with hot-extrusion data from previous studies.
Document Type Conference Object
Language English
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