Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1566254 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Particle irradiation produces defects which trap hydrogen isotopes and impurities in nuclear reactor materials. However, a comprehensive understanding of the basic mechanisms, and the final outcome of this process is still lacking. Here the evolution of defects, hydrogen, and impurities in tungsten during and after deuterium irradiation is simulated by solving rate theory equations. The results are in excellent agreement with irradiation experiments. Our results show that hydrogen is mainly trapped in tungsten monovacancies, and trapping in larger vacancy clusters increase with increasing implantation energy. The slow hydrogen desorption observed in experiments after irradiation, was found to be mainly due to detrapping of the weakly bound sixth hydrogen from monovacancies. Impurities are shown to play a significant role in decreasing Frenkel pair annihilation during irradiation, by trapping self-interstitial atoms. Moreover, we conclude that the formed impurity self-interstitial atom complexes could be the nucleation site for formation of large interstitial type dislocation loops observed experimentally.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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