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Effects of 3d electron configurations on helium bubble formation and void swelling in concentrated solid-solution alloys.

Authors :
Zhang, Yanwen
Wang, Xing
Osetsky, Yuri N.
Tong, Yang
Harrison, Robert
Donnelly, Stephen E.
Chen, Di
Wang, Yongqiang
Bei, Hongbin
Sales, Brian C.
More, Karren L.
Xiu, Pengyuan
Wang, Lumin
Weber, William J.
Source :
Acta Materialia. Dec2019, Vol. 181, p519-529. 11p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Elemental specific chemical complexity is known to play a critical role in microstructure development in single-phase concentrated solid-solution alloys (SP-CSAs), including both He bubble formation and irradiation-induced void swelling. While cavity formation and evolution under ion irradiation at elevated temperature are complex nonequilibrium processes, chemical effects are revealed at the level of electrons and atoms herein in a simplified picture, using Ni and a special set of Ni-based SP-CSAs composed of 3 d transition metals as model alloys. Based on Ni and the model alloys with minimized variables (e.g., atomic mass, size, and lattice structure), we discuss the effects of chemically-biased energy dissipation, defect energetics, sluggish diffusion, and atomic transport on cavity formation and evolution under both self-ion Ni irradiation and He implantation. The observed difference in microstructure evolution is attributed to the effects of d electron interactions in their integrated ability to dissipate radiation energy. The demonstrated impact of alloying 3 d transition metals with larger differences in the outermost electron counts suggests a simple design strategy for tuning defect properties to improve radiation tolerance in structural alloys. Image, graphical abstract [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13596454
Volume :
181
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Acta Materialia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139544098
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actamat.2019.10.013