Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1569559 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2007 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Samples of the welds from the Midland and Palisades reactors in the unirradiated condition and after neutron irradiation to a high fluence of up to 3.4 × 1023 m−2 (E > 1 MeV) have been characterized with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s local electrode atom probe. High number densities, ∼5 and ∼7 × 1023 m−3, respectively, of ∼2-nm-diameter copper-, nickel-, manganese- and silicon-enriched precipitates were observed after neutron irradiation. These copper-enriched precipitates were observed both in the matrix of the steel and also preferentially located along the dislocations. No appreciable differences were observed in the sizes or the compositions of the precipitates in the matrix and on the dislocations. The average interparticle distance along the dislocations was 11 ± 3 nm. Phosphorus segregation was also evident along the dislocations in both welds. No other nanoscale intragranular phases were observed in these neutron irradiated welds.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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