Comparison of void swelling of ferritic-martensitic and ferritic HT9 alloys after high-dose self-ion irradiation

2021 
Abstract Ferritic-martensitic (F/M) HT9 along with fully ferritic HT9 specimens were irradiated using self-ions to 600 peak displacement-per-atom (dpa) at 450 °C. To investigate and minimize the carbon contamination effect on void swelling, two identical F/M HT9 specimens were prepared: one without a coating and the other one with a tungsten and silver coating on the surface prior to irradiation. The specimen without a coating showed carbide formation in the matrix, resulting from carbon contamination during irradiation, with no voids observed. The coated sample did not form matrix carbides, and voids were observed within the irradiated region. The same coating was applied to the ferritic HT9, and void swelling results of both the F/M HT9 and the ferritic HT9 alloys were compared after irradiation. The F/M HT9 exhibited a maximum of 2.6% swelling, while the ferritic HT9 showed a maximum of 0.8% swelling at a 400–500 nm depth, equivalent to 334 local dpa. The results were correlated with the instability of carbides in the ferritic HT9 under irradiation. Carbides in the F/M HT9 and the ferritic HT9 are both M23C6, but the matrix carbides in the ferritic HT9 were less stable under the irradiation, compared to the ones on the grain boundaries in the F/M HT9. The study shows the impact of chemistry on the void swelling which overpowers the microstructural factors such as grain size and phase.
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