Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7967623 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Microstructural evolution induced by helium implantation and subsequent heavy ion irradiation has been investigated in single crystal and nano-engineered (NE) 3C SiC. Implantation with 65 keV He+ ions was performed at 277 °C, and the helium depth distribution was determined by elastic recoil detection analysis (ERDA). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) could not resolve the presence of bubbles in any of the helium-implanted single crystal SiC. However, helium platelets and small dislocation loops (â¼50 nm in diameter) were observed in the single crystal sample with the highest implantation fluence after 1 h annealing at 700 °C. Following irradiation with 9 MeV Au3+ ions at 700 °C, no bubbles were observed in the helium-implanted single crystal SiC, regardless of helium fluence. For the helium-implanted NE SiC, subsequent irradiation with 9 MeV Au ions to a dose of 10 dpa at 700 °C resulted in the formation and growth of bubbles, and a bimodal helium bubble size distribution was observed at the highest helium concentration (8000 appm) in the NE SiC.
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Authors
C.H. Chen, Y. Zhang, E. Fu, Y. Wang, M.L. Crespillo, C. Liu, S. Shannon, W.J. Weber,