Towards establishing best practice in the analysis of hydrogen and deuterium by atom probe tomography
Baptiste Gault, Aparna Saksena, Xavier Sauvage, Paul Bagot, Leonardo, S. Aota, Jonas Arlt, Lisa T. Belkacemi, Torben Boll, Yi-Sheng Chen, Luke, Daly, Milos B. Djukic, James O. Douglas, Maria J. Duarte, Peter J. Felfer,, Richard G. Forbes, Jing Fu, Hazel M. Gardner, Ryota Gemma

TL;DR
This paper discusses the challenges and best practices for analyzing hydrogen and deuterium in materials using atom probe tomography, aiming to improve quantitative mapping and understanding of hydrogen's effects on materials.
Contribution
It summarizes key issues in hydrogen analysis by APT and proposes standardized reporting practices to enhance data interpretation and accuracy.
Findings
Identifies residual hydrogen as a major challenge in APT analysis.
Highlights the need for standardized reporting of hydrogen analysis data.
Provides a pathway for establishing best practices in hydrogen analysis with APT.
Abstract
As hydrogen is touted as a key player in the decarbonization of modern society, it is critical to enable quantitative H analysis at high spatial resolution, if possible at the atomic scale. Indeed, H has a known deleterious impact on the mechanical properties (strength, ductility, toughness) of most materials that can hinder their use as part of the infrastructure of a hydrogen-based economy. Enabling H mapping, including local hydrogen concentration analyses at specific microstructural features, is essential for understanding the multiple ways that H affect the properties of materials, including for instance embrittlement mechanisms and their synergies, but also spatial mapping and quantification of hydrogen isotopes is essential to accurately predict tritium inventory of future fusion power plants, ensuring their safe and efficient operation for example. Atom probe tomography (APT)…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Materials Characterization Techniques · Fusion materials and technologies · Nuclear Physics and Applications
