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Temperature-dependent defect accumulation and evolution in Ni-irradiated NiFe concentrated solid-solution alloy.

Authors :
Fan, Zhe
Velisa, Gihan
Jin, Ke
Crespillo, Miguel L.
Bei, Hongbin
Weber, William J.
Zhang, Yanwen
Source :
Journal of Nuclear Materials. Jun2019, Vol. 519, p1-9. 9p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract Temperature significantly affects defect migration and evolution in irradiated materials. However, the effects of temperature on defect evolution in concentrated solid-solution alloys (CSAs), including high entropy alloys, are not well understood, despite their potential as structural materials in advanced nuclear reactors. As an important model system of these CSAs, equiatomic Ni 50 Fe 50 (NiFe) was selected to understand the effects of temperature on defect evolution during irradiation and subsequent thermal annealing. Specifically, defect accumulation and evolution in NiFe alloy under Ni-ion irradiation at 150, 300, and 500 K were studied, and the irradiated specimens were subsequently annealed at higher temperatures. Rutherford backscattering spectrometry along the <100> channeling direction was employed to study damage accumulation and evolution before and after each irradiation and annealing experiment. Here we show that more defects survive and accumulate at 150 K, but more importantly defects can migrate to deeper depths at this low irradiation temperature. Irradiation-induced damage at 150 and 300 K does not recover substantially after post-irradiation annealing at 500 K, but dramatic recovery is observed after post-irradiation annealing at 700 K, indicating an onset temperature of defect recovery between 500 and 700 K. The migration of irradiation-induced defects upon annealing is closely related to the mobility and stress state arising from the surviving defects. With the consideration of five stages of defect recovery in conventional dilute alloys, the underlying mechanisms for temperature-dependent defect accumulation and evolution in NiFe CSA are discussed. Graphical abstract Image 1 Highlights • Temperature effects on defect evolution in NiFe have been systematically studied. • Defects formed at lower irradiation temperature migrate to deeper depth. • Defect recovery is closely related with the size and nature of defects. • Defect evolution in NiFe is compared with defect recovery in diluted alloys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00223115
Volume :
519
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Nuclear Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135913884
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnucmat.2019.03.031