4.6 Article

Synthesis of Nano-Oxide Precipitates by Implantation of Ti, Y and O Ions in Fe-10%Cr: Towards an Understanding of Precipitation in Oxide Dispersion-Strengthened (ODS) Steels

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15144857

Keywords

ion beam synthesis (IBS); ODS steels; ion implantation; FeCr; nano-oxide precipitates; precipitation; Y2O3; Cr2O3; Y2Ti2O7; core; shell structure

Funding

  1. NEEDS French research programme (CNRS-AndraBRGM-CEA-EDF-Framatome-IRSN-Orano)
  2. French Research Federation for Fusion (FR-FCM)
  3. French Renatech network
  4. ANR Investissement d'Avenir program (TEMPOS Project) [ANR-10-EQPX-50]
  5. CNRS-CEA METSA French network [FR CNRS 3507]
  6. PHENIICS doctoral school of Universite Paris-Sud/Universite Paris-Saclay
  7. State of North Carolina
  8. National Science Foundation [ECCS-1542015, DMR-1726294]
  9. DOE NEUP [DE-NE0008875]

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The properties of oxide dispersion-strengthened steels depend on the nature and size distribution of their nano-oxide precipitates. Experimental results suggest that the formation of these precipitates is not thermodynamically favorable, but rather influenced by the dynamics of the implanted elements and induced defects. The order of ion implantation also affects the characteristics and morphology of the precipitates.
The properties of oxide dispersion-strengthened steels are highly dependent on the nature and size distribution of their constituting nano-oxide precipitates. A fine control of the processes of synthesis would enable the optimization of pertinent properties for use in various energy systems. This control, however, requires knowledge of the precise mechanisms of nucleation and growth of the nanoprecipitates, which are still a matter of debate. In the present study, nano-oxide precipitates were produced via the implantation of Y, Ti, and O ions in two different sequential orders in an Fe-10%Cr matrix that was subsequently thermally annealed. The results show that the oxides that precipitate are not necessarily favoured thermodynamically, but rather result from complex kinetics aspects related to the interaction between the implanted elements and induced defects. When Y is implanted first, the formation of nanoprecipitates with characteristics similar to those in conventionally produced ODS steels, especially with a core/shell structure, is evidenced. In contrast, when implantation starts with Ti, the precipitation of yttria during subsequent high-temperature annealing is totally suppressed, and corundum Cr2O3 precipitates instead. Moreover, the systematic involvement of {110} matrix planes in orientation relationships with the precipitates, independently of the precipitate nature, suggests matrix restriction effects on the early stages of precipitation.

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