Irradiation hardening of pure tungsten exposed to neutron irradiation

Pure tungsten samples have been neutron irradiated in HFIR at 90–850 °C to 0.03–2.2 dpa. A dispersed barrier hardening model informed by the available microstructure data has been used to predict the hardness. Comparison of the model predictions and the measured Vickers hardness reveals the dominant...

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Published inJournal of nuclear materials Vol. 480; pp. 235 - 243
Main Authors Hu, Xunxiang, Koyanagi, Takaaki, Fukuda, Makoto, Kumar, N.A.P. Kiran, Snead, Lance L., Wirth, Brian D., Katoh, Yutai
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier B.V 01.11.2016
Elsevier
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Summary:Pure tungsten samples have been neutron irradiated in HFIR at 90–850 °C to 0.03–2.2 dpa. A dispersed barrier hardening model informed by the available microstructure data has been used to predict the hardness. Comparison of the model predictions and the measured Vickers hardness reveals the dominant hardening contribution at various irradiation conditions. For tungsten samples irradiated in HFIR, the results indicate that voids and dislocation loops contributed to the hardness increase in the low dose region (<0.3 dpa), while the formation of intermetallic second phase precipitation, resulting from transmutation, dominates the radiation-induced strengthening beginning with a relatively modest dose (>0.6 dpa). The precipitate contribution is most pronounced for the HFIR irradiations, whereas the radiation-induced defect cluster microstructure can rationalize the entirety of the hardness increase observed in tungsten irradiated in the fast neutron spectrum of Joyo and the mixed neutron spectrum of JMTR.
Bibliography:National Inst. for Fusion Science (Japan)
AC05-00OR22725; SC0006661; NFE-13-04478
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Fusion Energy Sciences (FES)
ISSN:0022-3115
1873-4820
DOI:10.1016/j.jnucmat.2016.08.024