Investigation on the deformation mechanisms and size-dependent hardening effect of He bubbles in 84 dpa neutron irradiated Inconel X-750

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nme.2021.101025Get rights and content
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Abstract

Microstructural characterization and calculation of how several intrinsic features contribute to the mechanical properties of highly strained Inconel X-750 alloy specimens irradiated to 84 dpa at two distinct temperature ranges (300 °C–330 °C and 120 °C–280 °C) were performed. The individual contributions of different microstructural features to the critical resolved shear stress (CRSS) of the material, including the γ matrix, γ′ precipitates, irradiation induced defects, and helium bubbles, were calculated. The obstacle strength of He bubbles was found to be size-dependent and a critical size was determined. For bubbles < 2.4 nm, the obstacle strength is only approximately 0.03 while it can be as high as 0.55 for bubbles > 6.6 nm. In the high temperature range (300–330 °C) irradiated specimen, localised dislocation slip was found responsible for the failure of the specimen during micro-tensile testing, associated with significant helium bubble elongation. Elongation of helium bubbles on both the primary and adjacent secondary {1 1 1} planes was likely induced by the cross slip of screw dislocations. Nanotwins were also found adjacent to the shear failure surface in the high temperature specimen, but no elongated bubbles were found within the nano-twinned region. In the low temperature range (120–280 °C) irradiated highly strained specimen, a dislocation network structure was revealed.

Keywords

CANDU
Inconel X-750
Helium bubbles: irradiation hardening
Deformation mechanism

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