Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1567913 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2009 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
We investigate the role of radiation-induced defects in the microstructural evolution of Fe-Cr model alloys with two approaches; a positron annihilation measurement and computer simulations. We prepared Fe-Cr model alloys with different Cr contents which were irradiated with 2Â MeV-electrons at the JAEA accelerator at Takasaki in Japan. The production of vacancy-type defects was verified by positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy. The average positron lifetimes of the irradiated samples were increased by about 14% when compared to the unirradiated one. The ratio curves, derived from a Doppler broadening measurement, did not reveal a prominent change between the irradiated pure Fe and Fe-Cr alloys, which implies that there was no formation of a vacancy-Cr complex. We performed computer simulations by using the Metropolis Monte Carlo method to predict a possible microstructure composed of Cr and vacancies. As expected, the simulation also revealed that no vacancy-Cr complexes were formed. Both results support a small amount of radiation-induced swelling in the Fe-Cr alloys.
Related Topics
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
J. Kwon, T. Toyama, Y.-M. Kim, W. Kim, J.-H. Hong,