Abstract

A formal asymptotic analysis of two classes of phase field models for void growth and coarsening in irradiated solids has been performed to assess their sharp-interface kinetics. It was found that the sharp interface limit of type B models, which include only point defect concentrations as order parameters governed by Cahn-Hilliard equations, captures diffusion-controlled kinetics. It was also found that a type B model reduces to a generalized one-sided classical Stefan problem in the case of a high driving thermodynamic force associated with the void growth stage, while it reduces to a generalized one-sided Mullins-Sekerka problem when the driving force is low in the case of void coarsening. The latter case corresponds to the famous rate theory description of void growth. Type C models, which include point defect concentrations and a non-conserved order parameter to distinguish between the void and solid phases and employ coupled Cahn-Hilliard and Allen-Cahn equations, are shown to represent mixed diffusion and interfacial kinetics. In particular, the Allen-Cahn equation of model C reduces to an interfacial constitutive law representing the attachment and emission kinetics of point defects at the void surface. In the limit of a high driving force associated with the void growth stage, a type C model reduces to a generalized one-sided Stefan problem with kinetic drag. In the limit of low driving forces characterizing the void coarsening stage, however, the model reduces to a generalized one-sided Mullins-Sekerka problem with kinetic drag. The analysis presented here paves the way for constructing quantitative phase field models for the irradiation-driven nucleation and growth of voids in crystalline solids by matching these models to a recently developed sharp interface theory.

Highlights

  • Irradiation drives complex microstructure evolution in solids by producing large nonequilibrium densities of point defects (Olander, 1976; Was, 2017; Brailsford & Bullough, 1972)

  • The analysis so far shows that, for the low driving force limit that is suitable for describing the coarsening stage, the phase field model B for void growth under irradiation reduces to a generalized one-sided classical MullinsSekerka problem (Eqs. (38), (46), and (50))

  • Summary and conclusions The diffuse-interface void growth models of type B and C were analyzed by deriving their sharp-interface limits

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Summary

Introduction

Irradiation drives complex microstructure evolution in solids by producing large nonequilibrium densities of point defects (Olander, 1976; Was, 2017; Brailsford & Bullough, 1972). Our analysis concludes that phase field models of type B, which utilize the point defect concentrations as the only order parameters, can describe diffusion-controlled kinetics.

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