Abstract

The displacement damage induced in W and W-5wt.% Re and W-5wt.% Ta alloys by 2MeVW+ irradiation to doses 3.3×1017–2.5×1019W+/m2 at temperatures ranging from 300 to 750°C has been characterised by transmission electron microscopy. An automated sizing and counting approach based on Image J (a Java-based image processing programme developed at the National Institutes of Health) [1] has been performed for all near-bulk irradiation data. In all cases the damage comprised dislocation loops, mostly of interstitial type, with Burgers vectors b=1/2〈111〉 (>60%) and b=〈100〉. The diameters of loops did not exceed 20nm with most being ⩽6nm diameter. The loop number density varied between 1022 and 1023loops/m3. With increasing irradiation temperature, the loop size distributions shifted towards larger sizes, and there was a substantial decrease in loop number densities. The damage microstructure was less sensitive to dose than to temperature. Under the same irradiation conditions, loop number densities in the W-Re and W-Ta alloys were higher than in pure W but loops were smaller. In grains with normals close to z=〈001〉, loop strings developed in pure W at temperatures ⩾500°C and doses ⩾1.2dpa, but such strings were not observed in the W-Re or W-Ta alloys. However, in other grain orientations complex structures appeared in all materials and dense dislocation networks formed at higher doses.

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