Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1566465 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Properties of nuclear materials may be improved by employing composite materials. However, these properties usually degrade during the operation in a nuclear reactor environment due to radiation damage accumulation. For this study we fabricated a multi-layer structure composed of MgO and HfO2 thin films on a sapphire substrate. This multi-layer structure was designed to mimic a CERCER (ceramic–ceramic) composite fuel form. The goal of this study was to investigate features of radiation damage evolution cause by ion beam irradiation in a wide temperature range. We observed phase transformation in HfO2 from monoclinic to the tetragonal polymorph and no changes in MgO. Formation of thin amorphous regions adjacent to the MgO/HfO2 and HfO2/sapphire substrate interfaces was identified in both cases. Phase and microstructural changes demonstrated pronounced dependence on irradiation temperature, which we attributed to either enhanced annihilation of irradiation induced point defects or intermixing between the components of our multi-layered structure.

► We fabricated a multi-layer structure composed of MgO and HfO2 thin films. This structure mimics ceramic–ceramic composite nuclear form. ► The structures were subjected to ion beam irradiation at different temperatures. We investigated microstructural evolution at the near interface regions. We discussed nature of phase transformation in HfO2.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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