Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7963056 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Transition from long-range one-dimensional to short-range three-dimensional migration modes of interstitial defect clusters greatly reduces the damage accumulation in single-phase concentrated solid solution alloys under ion irradiation. A synergetic investigation with experimental, computational and modeling approaches revealed that both the resistance to void swelling and the delay in dislocation evolution in Ni-Fe alloys increased with iron concentration. This was attributed to the gradually increased sluggishness of defect migration, which enhances interstitial and vacancy recombination. Transition from long-range one-dimensional defect motion in pure nickel to short-range three-dimensional motion in concentrated Ni-Fe alloys is continuum, not abrupt, and within an iron concentration range up to 20%. The gradual transition process can be quantitatively characterized by the mean free path of the interstitial defect clusters.
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Authors
Chenyang Lu, Taini Yang, Liangliang Niu, Qing Peng, Ke Jin, Miguel L. Crespillo, Gihan Velisa, Haizhou Xue, Feifei Zhang, Pengyuan Xiu, Yanwen Zhang, Fei Gao, Hongbin Bei, William J. Weber, Lumin Wang,