Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1565681 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2013 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been used to investigate the re-solution of copper atoms from coherent, nanometer-sized copper precipitates in a body-centered cubic iron matrix. The molecular dynamics simulations used Finnis-Sinclair type interatomic potentials to describe the Fe-Cu system. Precipitate diameters of 1, 3 and 5Â nm were studied, with primary knock-on atom (PKA) from 1 to 100Â keV, although the majority of the cascade simulations and analysis of solute re-solution were performed for cascades of 10 or 20Â keV. The simulation results provide an assessment of the re-solution on a per-atom basis as a function of precipitate size, cascade location and energy. Smaller sized precipitates, with a larger surface to volume ratio, experienced larger re-solution on a per-atom basis than larger precipitates. Re-solution was observed to occur predominantly in the initial ballistic stages of the cascades when atomic collisions occur at high kinetic energy. A minimum PKA energy of around 1Â keV was required to produce re-solution, and the amount of re-solution appears to saturate for PKA energies above approximately 10Â keV, indicating that the MD results are representative of the energy range of interest. A model for prompt, cascade induced solute atom re-solution has been derived, following the approach used to describe fission gas bubble re-solution, and the parameters for describing copper atom re-solution are provided.
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Authors
A. Certain, H.-J. Lee Voigt, T.R. Allen, B.D. Wirth,