Status and update of the RaDIATE Collaboration R&D Program
K. Ammigan, P. Hurh (Fermilab)

TL;DR
The RaDIATE collaboration researches radiation effects on target materials for accelerators, conducting microstructural analyses, irradiation campaigns, and thermal shock tests to improve material performance in high-power environments.
Contribution
This paper summarizes RaDIATE's recent activities, including advanced microstructural characterization and new irradiation experiments, advancing understanding of radiation damage in accelerator materials.
Findings
Microstructural radiation damage characterized in decommissioned components.
New irradiation campaigns at high and low energy facilities.
Thermal shock resistance evaluated through beam-induced experiments.
Abstract
The Radiation Damage In Accelerator Target Environments (RaDIATE) collaboration was founded in 2012 and currently consists of over 50 participants and 11 institutions globally. Due to the increasing power of future proton accelerator sources in target facilities, there is a critical need to further understand the physical and thermo-mechanical radiation response of target facility materials. Thus, the primary objective of the RaDIATE collaboration is to draw on existing expertise in the nuclear materials and accelerator targets fields to generate new and useful materials data for application within the accelerator and fission/fusion communities. Current research activities of the collaboration include post irradiation examination (PIE) of decommissioned components from existing beamlines such as the NuMI beryllium beam window and graphite NT-02 target material. PIE of these components…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFusion materials and technologies · Ion-surface interactions and analysis · High-Velocity Impact and Material Behavior
