| Literature DB >> 28079191 |
Chenyang Lu1,2, Zheng Lu1, Xu Wang3, Rui Xie1, Zhengyuan Li1, Michael Higgins2, Chunming Liu1, Fei Gao2, Lumin Wang2,4.
Abstract
The world eagerly needs cleanly-generated electricity in the future. Fusion reactor is one of the most ideal energy resources to defeat the environmental degradation caused by the consumption of traditional fossil energy. To meet the design requirements of fusion reactor, the development of the structural materials which can sustain the elevated temperature, high helium concentration and extreme radiation environments is the biggest challenge for the entire material society. Oxide dispersion strengthened steel is one of the most popular candidate materials for the first wall/blanket applications in fusion reactor. In this paper, we evaluate the radiation tolerance of a 9Cr ODS steel developed in China. Compared with Ferritic/Martensitic steel, this ODS steel demonstrated a significantly higher swelling resistance under ion irradiation at 460 °C to 188 displacements per atom. The role of oxides and grain boundaries on void swelling has been explored. The results indicated that the distribution of higher density and finer size of nano oxides will lead a better swelling resistance for ODS alloy. The original pyrochlore-structured Y2Ti2O7 particles dissolved gradually while fine Y-Ti-O nano clusters reprecipitated in the matrix during irradiation. The enhanced radiation tolerance is attributed to the reduced oxide size and the increased oxide density.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28079191 PMCID: PMC5228121 DOI: 10.1038/srep40343
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Microstructure of COS-2 before irradiation.
(a) EBSD mapping showing a bimodal grain distribution, (b) HAADF image of nano-oxides in fine grains, (c) HAADF image of nano-oxides in coarse grains.
Figure 2Void swelling in COS-2.
(a) SRIM prediction profiles of pre-implanted helium distribution, irradiated Fe++ ion concentration and displacement damage dose. (b~c) BF TEM images of COS-2 (b) in fine grain region and (c) in coarse grain region irradiated to 188 dpa by 5 MeV Fe++ at 460 °C with 100 appm helium concentration.
Figure 3Microstructure changes of COS-2 after heavy ion irradiation.
(a) Cross-sectional HAADF STEM image of a coarse grain in COS-2 after 5 MeV Fe++ irradiation to a fluence of 4.6 × 1017 ion/cm2 at 460 °C, with 100 appm helium pre-implanted; (b) HAADF image showing oxide distribution in coarse grain of COS-2 before irradiation; (c)~(e) HAADF images showing oxide distributions in various depth with various doses; (f) High resolution STEM-BF image showing the pyrochlore-structured Y2Ti2O7 found in the coarse grains before irradiation; (g) HR-HAADF image showing the newly formed Y-Ti-O nano-cluster in coarse grains after irradiation.
Figure 4Dependence of oxide size, density and sink energy (So) on increasing ion dose in coarse grains of COS-2.
Figure 5Schematics of oxide dissolution-reprecipitation process in coarse grains of COS-2.