4.7 Article

Synergies between H, He and radiation damage in dual and triple ion irradiation of candidate fusion blanket materials

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MATERIALS
Volume 565, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2022.153722

Keywords

Ion irradiation; Hydrogen; Helium; Reduced Activation Ferritic; Martensitic; Steels; F82H

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy , Office of Science , Office of Fusion Energy Sciences [DE-SC0020226]

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Three ferritic/martensitic alloys were irradiated with single, dual, and triple ion beams to study cavity evolution. Co-injection of hydrogen with helium increased cavity number density and size, leading to higher swelling. F82H alloy exhibited the lowest swelling due to high sink strength, while CNA3 alloy showed higher swelling than F82H due to lower sink strength caused by precipitation dissolution.
Three ferritic/martensitic alloys were studied to understand the synergistic effect between single ion beam (Fe 2 + ), dual ion beam (Fe 2 + + He 2 + and Fe 2 + + H + ), and triple ion beam (Fe 2 + + He 2 + + H + ) irradiations on cavity evolution. A commercial alloy, F82H, a castable nanostructured alloy, CNA3, and a high purity model alloy, Fe8Cr2W, were irradiated at 400 degrees C to 600 degrees C to a damage level of 50 dpa at a damage rate of 1 x 10 -3 dpa/s with He and H injection rates of 10 and 40 appm/dpa, respectively. Post-irradiation characterization via bright field transmission electron microscopy and high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy was performed on all irradiated conditions to characterize the cavity size distribution and determine the effects of H/He injection on cavity microstructure. In all three alloys, hydrogen co-injection with helium resulted in an increased cavity number density and maximum cavity size, producing an increase in swelling over that from helium injection alone. Swelling in F82H appears to peak between 450 degrees C and 500 degrees C. At 600 degrees C, swelling was minimal and cavities of high density and small size were confined to grain boundaries and dislocations while at 400 degrees C, swelling is also low with a nearly homogeneous, high density, distribution of very small cavities throughout. Swelling was least in the commercial alloy F82H due to the high sink strength. The CNA3 alloy underwent dissolution of precipitates that lowered the sink strength and resulted in higher swelling than F82H, but less than the model alloy. Electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) elemental mapping revealed hydrogen forming a halo-like structure about the periphery of the cavities and helium residing within the cavities themselves. This observation suggests that hydrogen reduces the surface energy of helium-filled cavities which results in both increased cavity number density and cavity size in triple beam irradiation over dual beam irradiation.

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