MX precipitate behavior in an irradiated advanced Fe-9Cr steel: Helium effects on phase stability
T.M. Kelsy Green, Tim Graening, Weicheng Zhong, Ying Yang, and Kevin, G. Field

TL;DR
This study investigates how helium affects the stability of MX precipitates in irradiated Fe-9Cr steel, revealing helium's role in suppressing precipitate growth at certain conditions, which is crucial for understanding material performance in fusion reactors.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis of helium's impact on MX precipitate stability in Fe-9Cr alloys under irradiation, combining experimental data with a stability model.
Findings
Helium suppresses radiation-enhanced precipitate growth at intermediate damage levels.
Helium has no effect on precipitate dissolution at high doses.
A precipitate stability model explains helium's influence on diffusion and dissolution processes.
Abstract
Precipitates are main microstructural features to provide high temperature creep strength and radiation resistance in structural materials for fusion energy systems. However, the mechanisms of precipitate stability under irradiation in candidate structural materials for fusion first-wall and blanket components are poorly understood. In particular, the dual effects of helium transmutation and irradiation-induced damage on precipitate evolution have not been systematically studied in candidate materials, the leading of which are Fe-9Cr reduced activation ferritic/martensitic (RAFM) alloys. To fill this knowledge gap, a fundamental understanding of the single and combined interactions of helium (0-25 appm He/dpa), temperature (300-600C), and atomic displacements (15-100 dpa) on the behavior of MX (M=metal, X=C and/or N) precipitates in an advanced Fe-9Cr RAFM alloy were studied through the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFusion materials and technologies · Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Steels · Nuclear Materials and Properties
