Weber, Daniel Perry2024-01-112024-01-112024-01-10vt_gsexam:38686https://hdl.handle.net/10919/117338Liquid metals (LMs) are compelling candidates for use as plasma facing components (PFCs) in fusion devices to mitigate heat loading, limit damage due to erosion, and possibly breed tritium. When used as electrodes, such as in z-pinch devices, PFCs are subject to large current and magnetic flux densities resulting in large Lorentz forces. Furthermore, if the PFCs are LM, the forces excite wave behavior that has not previously been investigated. The work presented here first characterizes the response of LMs to current pulses which peak between 50 and 200 kA and generate magnetic pressures between 0.5 and 5 MPa. High-speed videography records the liquid metal free surface during and after the current pulse and captures a fast moving, annular jet of LM emerging from the main body. The vertical velocities of the jet range from 0.6 to 5.3 m/s which is consistent with hydrodynamic predictions. Ejection of small droplets is observed from the LM immediately after the current pulse, preceding the LM jet, with velocities ranging from −3.1 to 18.9 m/s in the vertical direction and −14.3 to 6.3 m/s in the radial. A statistical model is developed to predict the likelihood of certain LM PFC material contaminating a core plasma and the severity in such an event. Lastly, effectiveness of bulk wave movement mitigation is investigated with two solid barrier designs, a cylindrical and conical baffle. These designs were fabricated after an iterative design process with assistance from hydrodynamic simulations. A cylindrical baffle design is shown to be preferable for integration into future fusion devices for the reduced likelihood of interference with plasma column formation.ETDenIn CopyrightMagneto-hydrodynamicsliquid metalsfusion energyfluid responseplasma-material interactionsCharacterization of Liquid Metal Free Surface Response to an Electromagnetic Impulse and Implications for Future Nuclear Fusion DevicesDissertation