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1.
Materials (Basel) ; 15(12)2022 Jun 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35744308

RESUMEN

Small disks are often the specimen of choice for exposure in nuclear reactor environments, and this geometry invariably limits the types of mechanical testing that can be performed on the specimen. Recently, shear punch testing has been utilized to evaluate changes arising from neutron irradiation in test reactor environments on these small disk specimens. As part of a broader effort to link accelerated testing using ion irradiation and conventional neutron irradiation techniques, a novel microshear specimen geometry was developed for use with heavy-ion irradiated specimens. The technique was demonstrated in pure Cu irradiated to 11 and 110 peak dpa with 10 MeV Cu ions. At 11 peak dpa, the Cu specimen had a high density of small voids in the irradiated region, while at 110 peak dpa, larger voids with an average void swelling of ~20% were observed. Micropillar and microshear specimens both exhibited hardening at 11 dpa, followed by softening at 110 dpa. The close alignment of the new microshear technique and more conventional micropillar testing, and the fact that both follow intuition, is a good first step towards applying microshear testing to a wider range of irradiated materials.

2.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 11(10)2021 Sep 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34684979

RESUMEN

Beyond the current commercial materials, refining the grain size is among the proposed strategies to manufacture resilient materials for industrial applications demanding high resistance to severe environments. Here, large strain machining (LSM) was used to manufacture nanostructured HT-9 steel with enhanced thermal stability, mechanical properties, and ductility. Nanocrystalline HT-9 steels with different aspect rations are achieved. In-situ transmission electron microscopy annealing experiments demonstrated that the nanocrystalline grains have excellent thermal stability up to 700 °C with no additional elemental segregation on the grain boundaries other than the initial carbides, attributing the thermal stability of the LSM materials to the low dislocation densities and strains in the final microstructure. Nano-indentation and micro-tensile testing performed on the LSM material pre- and post-annealing demonstrated the possibility of tuning the material's strength and ductility. The results expound on the possibility of manufacturing controlled nanocrystalline materials via a scalable and cost-effective method, albeit with additional fundamental understanding of the resultant morphology dependence on the LSM conditions.

3.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 27(Pt 5): 1430-1437, 2020 Sep 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32876620

RESUMEN

Measurement modalities in Bragg coherent diffraction imaging (BCDI) rely on finding a signal from a single nanoscale crystal object which satisfies the Bragg condition among a large number of arbitrarily oriented nanocrystals. However, even when the signal from a single Bragg reflection with (hkl) Miller indices is found, the crystallographic axes on the retrieved three-dimensional (3D) image of the crystal remain unknown, and thus localizing in reciprocal space other Bragg reflections becomes time-consuming or requires good knowledge of the orientation of the crystal. Here, the commissioning of a movable double-bounce Si (111) monochromator at the 34-ID-C endstation of the Advanced Photon Source is reported, which aims at delivering multi-reflection BCDI as a standard tool in a single beamline instrument. The new instrument enables, through rapid switching from monochromatic to broadband (pink) beam, the use of Laue diffraction to determine crystal orientation. With a proper orientation matrix determined for the lattice, one can measure coherent diffraction patterns near multiple Bragg peaks, thus providing sufficient information to image the full strain tensor in 3D. The design, concept of operation, the developed procedures for indexing Laue patterns, and automated measuring of Bragg coherent diffraction data from multiple reflections of the same nanocrystal are discussed.

4.
Materials (Basel) ; 12(20)2019 Oct 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31614970

RESUMEN

As one candidate alloy for future Generation IV and fusion reactors, a dual-phase 12Cr oxide-dispersion-strengthened (ODS) alloy was developed for high temperature strength and creep resistance and has shown good void swelling resistance under high damage self-ion irradiation at high temperature. However, the effect of helium and its combination with radiation damage on oxide dispersoid stability needs to be investigated. In this study, 120 keV energy helium was preloaded into specimens at doses of 1 × 1015 and 1 × 1016 ions/cm2 at room temperature, and 3.5 MeV Fe self-ions were sequentially implanted to reach 100 peak displacement-per-atom at 475 °C. He implantation alone in the control sample did not affect the dispersoid morphology. After Fe ion irradiation, a dramatic increase in density of coherent oxide dispersoids was observed at low He dose, but no such increase was observed at high He dose. The study suggests that helium bubbles act as sinks for nucleation of coherent oxide dispersoids, but dispersoid growth may become difficult if too many sinks are introduced, suggesting that a critical mass of trapping is required for stable dispersoid growth.

5.
Materials (Basel) ; 10(8)2017 Jul 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28773219

RESUMEN

We studied the effects ion beam irradiation on carbon nanotube (CNT) yarns. CNT yarn was fabricated by drawing and spinning CNT sheets from a vertically aligned CNT forest. The yarn was irradiated by 2.5 MeV protons in either vacuum or air. Irradiation in air was achieved by directing the proton beam through a 0.025 mm thick Ti window. Irradiation in vacuum occurred at a pressure of <10-6 torr at room temperature and at an elevated temperature of 600 °C. Tensile testing revealed that CNT yarn irradiated in air increased in tensile strength with increasing proton fluence. For yarn irradiated in vacuum, however, the strength decreased with increasing fluence. We believe that irradiation-induced excitation and trapping/bonding of gas atoms between tubes may play a role for the mechanical property changes.

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