TY - JOUR
T1 - Plasticity in irradiated FeCrAl nanopillars investigated using discrete dislocation dynamics
AU - Pachaury, Yash
AU - Warren, George
AU - Wharry, Janelle P.
AU - Po, Giacomo
AU - El-Azab, Anter
N1 - This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy (DOE-NE) through Nuclear Energy University Programs contract DE-NE0008758 , and by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering , through award number DE-SC0017718 at Purdue University.
PY - 2023/8
Y1 - 2023/8
N2 - In this paper, we investigate plasticity in irradiated FeCrAl nanopillars using discrete dislocation dynamics simulations (DDD), with comparisons to transmission electron microscopic (TEM) in situ tensile tests of ion- and neutron-irradiated commercial C35M FeCrAl alloy. The effects of irradiation-induced defects, such as a/2<111> and a<100> type loops and composition fluctuations representative of phase separation in irradiated FeCrAl alloys, are investigated separately as well as superposed together in simulations. We explore the effects of defects on the stress-strain behavior, specifically yield strength and hardening response, of FeCrAl nanopillars. Our simulations confirm the widely accepted fact that irradiated alloys exhibit a stress-strain response with higher yield strength as compared to unirradiated alloys. However, our DDD calculations reveal an atypical superposition of the hardening contributions due to composition inhomogeneity and irradiation loops wherein composition inhomogeneity annihilates the hardening due to irradiation loops at small scales. As a result, we observe that the yield strength in irradiated alloys, after taking into consideration the effects of both composition inhomogeneity and irradiation loops, is smaller than the yield strength of the alloys with only irradiation loops and is approximately same for the alloy with composition inhomogeneity alone. This is referred to as “destructive interference” between the hardening contributions due to composition fluctuations and irradiation loops in the paper. We also identify this destructive interference in the superposition in our parallel TEM in situ tensile tests on unirradiated, ion-irradiated, and neutron-irradiated C35M FeCrAl alloy. This destructive interference in the hardening contributions contrasts with the dispersed barrier hardening (DBH) models widely utilized by the experimental community to model the hardening contributions due to different irradiation induced defects. The effects of the loading orientations on the yield strength and hardening are investigated and the mechanisms for the hardening in irradiated FeCrAl alloys are also reported.
AB - In this paper, we investigate plasticity in irradiated FeCrAl nanopillars using discrete dislocation dynamics simulations (DDD), with comparisons to transmission electron microscopic (TEM) in situ tensile tests of ion- and neutron-irradiated commercial C35M FeCrAl alloy. The effects of irradiation-induced defects, such as a/2<111> and a<100> type loops and composition fluctuations representative of phase separation in irradiated FeCrAl alloys, are investigated separately as well as superposed together in simulations. We explore the effects of defects on the stress-strain behavior, specifically yield strength and hardening response, of FeCrAl nanopillars. Our simulations confirm the widely accepted fact that irradiated alloys exhibit a stress-strain response with higher yield strength as compared to unirradiated alloys. However, our DDD calculations reveal an atypical superposition of the hardening contributions due to composition inhomogeneity and irradiation loops wherein composition inhomogeneity annihilates the hardening due to irradiation loops at small scales. As a result, we observe that the yield strength in irradiated alloys, after taking into consideration the effects of both composition inhomogeneity and irradiation loops, is smaller than the yield strength of the alloys with only irradiation loops and is approximately same for the alloy with composition inhomogeneity alone. This is referred to as “destructive interference” between the hardening contributions due to composition fluctuations and irradiation loops in the paper. We also identify this destructive interference in the superposition in our parallel TEM in situ tensile tests on unirradiated, ion-irradiated, and neutron-irradiated C35M FeCrAl alloy. This destructive interference in the hardening contributions contrasts with the dispersed barrier hardening (DBH) models widely utilized by the experimental community to model the hardening contributions due to different irradiation induced defects. The effects of the loading orientations on the yield strength and hardening are investigated and the mechanisms for the hardening in irradiated FeCrAl alloys are also reported.
KW - Composition fluctuations/phase separation
KW - Discrete dislocation dynamics
KW - FeCrAl alloys
KW - Radiation induced hardening
KW - α' precipitates
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ijplas.2023.103676
DO - 10.1016/j.ijplas.2023.103676
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85162945544
SN - 0749-6419
VL - 167
JO - International journal of plasticity
JF - International journal of plasticity
M1 - 103676
ER -