Modified deformation behaviour of self-ion irradiated tungsten: A combined nano-indentation, HR-EBSD and crystal plasticity study
Suchandrima Das, Hongbing Yu, Kenichiro Mizohata, Edmund Tarleton,, Felix Hofmann

TL;DR
This study combines experimental nano-indentation, HR-EBSD, and crystal plasticity modeling to understand how self-ion irradiation affects tungsten's deformation behavior, revealing dose-dependent hardening and softening phenomena relevant for nuclear applications.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive approach integrating experiments and modeling to predict irradiation effects on tungsten's mechanical properties across different damage levels.
Findings
Hardness increases up to 0.032 dpa then saturates.
Crystal plasticity model captures irradiation-induced hardening and softening.
Model predictions align with experimental surface profiles and dislocation structures.
Abstract
Predicting the dramatic changes in material properties caused by irradiation damage is key for the design of future nuclear fission and fusion reactors. Self-ion implantation is an attractive tool for mimicking the effects of neutron irradiation. However, the damaged layer of implanted samples is only few microns thick, making it difficult to estimate macroscopic properties. Here we address this challenge using a combination of experimental and modelling techniques. We concentrate on self-ion-implanted tungsten, the front-runner for fusion armour components and a prototypical bcc material. To capture dose-dependent evolution of properties, we experimentally characterise samples with damage levels from 0.01 to 1 dpa. Spherical nano-indentation of <001> grains shows hardness increasing up to a dose of 0.032 dpa, beyond which it saturates. AFM measurements show pile-up increasing up to the…
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