Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1567745 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract
The estimation of the number of inert gas atoms contained at equilibrium in microscale bubbles in a solid usually relies on a well-known formula equilibrating the internal pressure of He to the surface energy of the bubble. This approach evidences a strong variation with temperature of He content for a given bubble. At the opposite, at the Angstrom scale, ab initio calculations for He contained in vacancy assemblies neglect temperature effects. In this work, empirical potential molecular dynamics simulations are used to study, in the case of helium inserted in cubic silicon carbide, the variation of the He content of sub-nanoscale cavities with temperature. To do so free energy for He atoms inserted in cavities made of a few vacancies (up to 29) are calculated. One then evidences the existence of a sub-surface segregation in interstitial sites close to the surface of the cavity. The variation of the He content with temperature is observed to be negligible at the nanoscale, thus validating the ab initio approach.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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