Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9793768 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2005 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
Positron annihilation spectroscopy was used to study the formation and annealing of vacancy clusters in 16Cr15Ni3Mo austenitic steels and Fe-36%Ni model alloys and in the same compounds containing 1.02 and 2.5 wt% titanium respectively. Defects were induced by electron (5 MeV) irradiation at 270-573 K. How a developed initial dislocation structure influenced the accumulation and annealing of vacancy defects in these steels and alloys was analyzed. It was shown that vacancies interacted with titanium atoms. As a result, the Ti-containing steels and alloys exposed to radiation at temperatures from 270 to 423 K had an enhanced concentration of fine vacancy clusters decorated with titanium, which were thermally stable up to 450 K. A high initial dislocation density in the deformed steels and alloys led to a several-fold decrease in the concentration of vacancy clusters as compared to their concentration in the solution annealed state. The formation of fine TiC particles in Ti-modified deformed steel was monitored at the annealing temperatures from 850 to 1070 K.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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