4 research outputs found

    Impact of ion irradiation damage on SiC and ZrN mechanical properties

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    Key to the safe operation of nuclear reactors is the understanding of materials degradation due to neutron damage. Ion implantation is often used as a surrogate for nutron damage when screening nuclear candidate materials. Ion implantation results in a thin damage layer, the mechanical properties of which are often difficult to determine. In this study a micromechanical test regime is developed in a model material, 6H single crystal silicon carbide (SiC). This test technique is then applied to gold ion irradiated zirconium nitride (ZrN). Micromechanical test samples are often prepared using a focused ion beam. However, ion beam milling has the potential to damage the crystal structure of a material and introduce residual stress. Therefore, a range of cutting strategies were used to assess the effects of focused ion beam cutting on the modulus and strength of SiC cantilevers. The effects of sample size were also explored. Gallium ion milling resulted in amorphisation of the surface of the SiC crystal micro cantilevers. The thickness of the amorphous zone was then reduced using low voltage cleaning. Low voltage cleaning did not, however, result in increased mechanical performance as other unintended consequences such as cantilever edge rounding occurred. SiC exhibited a plastic deformation threshold of around 0.3 × 0.3 µm but did not exhibit a significant size effect. Nanoindentation was used as a benchmark test to compare to the mechanical properties gathered during micro bend testing. Under indentation conditions, a size effect was identified in hardness and modulus but not in fracture toughness. Modulus results from indentation, and micro bend testing was comparable when ion damage was accounted for.Hot pressed ZrN samples were ion implanted with gold ions. Microstructural characterisation, nanoindentation and micromechanical tests were performed in the ion implanted zone. Microstructural characterisation identified a dual phase microstructure consisting of ZrN and Zr2ON2. The implanted layer consisted of implanted gold ions followed by a network of dislocations centred around a depth of 1.20 µm. High-resolution electron backscatter diffraction (HR-EBSD) identified that tensile surface stresses and compressive subsurface stress had been introduced. Nanoindentation linked ion implantation to increased hardness and no modification in modulus. Micromechanical testing indicated a reduction in modulus and strength. This work highlighted the need to understand sample size effect and ion damage on micro mechanical tests if they are to be used for screening nuclear materials.</div

    Plastic deformation of polycrystalline aluina introduced by scaled-down drop-weight impacts

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    We present our findings after scaled-down drop-weight tests, performed under relatively low loading conditions and employing a small-scale spherical indenter as a projectile, to boost the strain rate and energy density of the impact, resulted in the generation of a cavity of measurable depth on the surface of a pure, fully dense, alumina ceramic. We demonstrate that activated dislocations are a main contributor in the formation of the residual impression with an estimated maximum density of ~4.02×1014 m−2

    In-situ micro bend testing of SiC and the effects of Ga+ ion damage

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    The Young’s modulus of 6H single crystal silicon carbide (SiC) was tested with micro cantilevers that had a range of cross-sectional dimensions with surfaces cleaned under different accelerating voltages of Ga+ beam. A clear size effect is seen with Young’s modulus decreasing as the cross-sectional area reduces. One of the possible reasons for such size effect is the Ga+ induced damage on all surfaces of the cantilever. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was used to analyse the degree of damage, and the measurements of damage is compared to predictions by SRIM irradiation simulation

    Structural integrity and characteristics at lattice and nanometre levels of ZrN polycrystalline irradiated by 4 MeV Au ions

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    We report an as-hot-pressed zirconium nitride polycrystalline with its primary crystal structure maintained no change but lattice defects and features were introduced at nanometre-scale after being irradiated by 4 MeV Au 2+ with a total fluence of 5 × 10 16 /cm 2 . The variation of grey-level seen in backscattered electron images and electron backscattered diffraction maps directly evidenced the structure integrity of the polycrystalline ZrN is well maintained with no crystal structure change of ZrN. The irradiation depth had no relevance to crystal orientation, and Au deposition peaked at a depth of ∼0.58 μm with a near-Gaussian distribution. Within a depth < 0.58 μm, long dislocation lines were developed with a Burgers vector of [01¯] b /2 and density 3.2 × 10 14 1/m 2 ; beyond this depth, dislocation loops were formed with much higher density. In the ionization zone, cubic ZrO 2 crystallites precipitated in a size of ∼5 nm. The irradiation damage processes are discussed based on the observed features
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