Abstract
AbstractA rate theory model is formulated wherein amorphous clusters are formed by a damage event. These clusters are considered centers of expansion (CEs), or excess-free-volume zones. Simultaneously, centers of compression (CCs) are created in the material. The CCs are local regions of increased density that travel through the material as an elastic (e.g., acoustic) shock wave. The CEs can be annihilated upon contact with a sufficient number of CCs, to form either a crystallized region indistinguishable from the host material, or a region with a slight disorientation (recrystallized grain). Recrystallized grains grow by the accumulation of additional CCs.Preirradiation of U3Si above the critical temperature for amorphization results in the formation of nanometer-size grains. In addition, subsequent reirradiation of these samples in the same ion flux at temperatures below the critical temperature shows that the material has developed a resistance to radiation-induced amorphization (i.e., a higher dose is needed to amorphize preirradiated samples than those that have not been preirradiated). In the model, it is assumed that grain boundaries act as effective sinks for defects, and that enhanced defect annihilation is responsible for retarding amorphization below the critical temperature by, for example, preventing a buildup of vacancies adjacent to the grain boundaries. The calculations have been validated against data from ion-irradiation experiments with U3Si. For appropriate values of the activation energy of thermal crystallization, the model predicts the evolution of a two phase microstructure consisting of nanocrystalline grains and amorphous clusters.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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