Characterizing accelerated precipitation in proton irradiated steel
[摘要] Ion irradiation provides a promising substitute to neutron tests for investigating the effects of radiation on materials for fission and fusion reactor plants. Here we show proton irradiation can quantitatively reproduce precipitation that leads to embrittlement in reactor pressure vessel steels, at dose rates 104 times greater than experienced in fission reactor operation. Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) is used to characterize precipitate size distributions in copper-containing steels irradiated to average doses of similar or equal to 7 mdpa with 5 MeV protons. Comparing our results with the literature on reactor pressure vessel steels containing >= 1 at.% nickel, we find a power-law scaling of dose with exponent 0.25-0.30 accounts for the effects of dose rate on precipitate volume fraction over 6 orders of magnitude in dose rate. In conjunction with dose rate, carbon is identified as performing a leading role in determining precipitate sizes, adding to the known effects of nickel, manganese and irradiation temperature. We discuss the composition of precipitates inferred from SANS, taking previous atom probe tomography studies into consideration. (C) 2021 Published by Elsevier B.V.
[发布日期] 2021-12-15 [发布机构]
[效力级别] [学科分类]
[关键词] Precipitation kinetics;Irradiation-hardening rate;Ion irradiation;Nanostructure;Small-angle scattering [时效性]