Evolution of radiation-induced damage in nuclear graphite -- a comparative structural and microstructural study
Magdalena Wilczopolska, Kinga Suchorab, Magdalena Gaweda, Malgorzata, Frelek-Kozak, Pawel Ciepielewski, Marcin Brykala, Wojciech Chmurzynski, Iwona, Jozwik

TL;DR
This study investigates how different types of nuclear graphite degrade structurally under ion irradiation, revealing the progression of damage and disorder, which is crucial for the safety and efficiency of nuclear reactors.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of structural and microstructural damage in nuclear graphite under ion irradiation, using Raman spectroscopy and SEM, with a new spectra fitting methodology.
Findings
Structural degradation progresses from slight amorphisation to rapid deterioration at high fluences.
Heavier Ar+ ions cause more damage than lighter He+ ions.
Microstructural evolution correlates with the stepwise structural deterioration.
Abstract
Graphite, as a material for high-temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTGR), will be exposed to harsh environment. The stability of graphite structure under irradiation is of a key importance for efficiency, reliability and security of the Generation IV nuclear reactors. Three types of nuclear grade graphite were subjected to irradiation in this research - two commercially manufactured (IG-110 and NBG-17) and the laboratory's in-home material (NCBJ). The samples were exposed to 150 keV Ar+ and He+ ions bombardment at 400 C with fluences ranging from 1E12 to 2E17 ion/cm2 in order to simulate in-reactor conditions. For analysis of the level of structure damage, type of created defects and crystallite size changes under ion irradiation ex-situ Raman spectroscopy was used. The methodology of spectra fitting was developed. Furthermore, SEM observation of irradiated materials was performed.…
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