Degradation of mechanical properties due to nanometric irradiation induced defects is one of the challenging issues in designing ferritic materials for future nuclear fusion reactors. Various types of defects, namely dislocation loops, voids, He bubbles and Cr precipitates may be produced in ferritic materials due to high doses of irradiation with the 14 MeV neutrons stemming from the deuterium-tritium fusion reaction. Multiscale modelling methods, namely molecular dynamics (MD) and dislocation dynamics (DD) methods, are used here to study the impact of radiation-induced defects on the mechanical properties of model ferritic material. MD simulation is used to study the state of a nanometric helium bubble in α-Fe as a function of temperature, 10 to 700 K, and He content, 1 to 5 He atoms per vacancy. It appears that up to moderate temperatures the Fe lattice can confine He to solid state, in good agreement with known solid-liquid transition diagram of pure He. However, while for a given temperature and He density range where an fcc structure is expected, He in the bubble forms an amorphous phase. He bubble forms a polyhedron whose morphology depends on either the surface energy or elastic-plastic properties of Fe at either low or high pressure, respectively. At high He contents the bubble surface breaks down at the mechanical stability limit of the Fe crystal, leading to a pressure decrease in the bubble. The basic mechanisms of the interaction in α-Fe between a moving dislocation and a nanometric defect, as a function of temperature, interatomic potentials, interaction geometry and size are investigated using MD simulation. The stress-strain responses are obtained under imposed strain rate and using different interatomic potentials for Fe-Fe and Fe-He interactions. It appears that voids and He bubbles are strong obstacles to dislocation, which induce hardening and loss of ductility. A nanometric void is a stronger obstacle than a He bubble at low He contents, whereas at high He contents, the He bubble becomes a stronger obstacle. It also appears that different potentials give different strengths and rates of decrease of obstacle strength with increasing temperature. Temperature eases the dislocation release, due to the increased mobility of the screw segments appearing on the dislocation line upon bowing from the void or He bubble. Concerning the obstacle size at low content He bubble, where it is penetrable defect, size increase from 1 to 5 nm make them harder in agreement with the elasticity of continuum. At high He contents a size dependent loop punching is observed, which at larger bubble sizes leads to a multistep dislocation-defect interaction. Atomistic simulations reveal that the He bubble induces an inhomogeneous stress field in its surroundings, which strongly influences the dislocation passage depending on the geometry of the interaction. Fe-Cr alloys are also studied using MD simulations as model alloys for the ferritic base steels. St
Manon Eugénie Voisin--Leprince
John Martin Kolinski, Chenzhuo Li, Xinyue Wei