Defect Imaging and Detection of Precipitates Using a New Scanning Positron Microbeam
Thomas Gigl, Lukas Beddrich, Marcel Dickmann, Benjamin Rien\"acker,, Matthias Thalmayr, Sebastian Vohburger, Christoph Hugenschmidt

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel scanning positron microbeam with high spatial resolution for defect imaging, enabling rapid 2D defect mapping in materials such as welded aluminum alloys.
Contribution
The development of a high-brightness, high-resolution scanning positron microbeam with short measurement times for defect imaging in materials.
Findings
Detected vacancy-like defects and Cu precipitates in aluminum welds.
Revealed a sharp transition between raw material and weld zone.
Identified supersaturated Cu solution formation in weld center.
Abstract
We report on a newly developed scanning positron microbeam based on threefold moderation of positrons provided by the high intensity positron source NEPOMUC. For brightness enhancement a remoderation unit with a nm thin Ni(100) foil and 9.6% efficiency is applied to reduce the area of the beam spot by a factor of 60. In this way, defect spectroscopy is enabled with a lateral resolution of m over a large scanning range of mm. Moreover, 2D defect imaging using Doppler broadening spectroscopy (DBS) is demonstrated to be performed within exceptional short measurement times of less than two minutes for an area of mm (m) with a resolution of m (m). We studied the defect structure in laser beam welds of the high-strength agehardened Al alloy (AlCu6Mn, EN AW-2219 T87) by applying (coincident) DBS…
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