Abstract

Nickel‐base alloys have been selected as a potential metallic material for reactor internals in Generation IV reactors. In order to evaluate their helium embrittlement resistance, microstrain changes and evolution of vacancy‐type defects after Helium irradiation and postimplantation annealing have been studied by grazing incidence X‐ray diffraction (GIXRD) and slow positron doppler broadening spectroscopy (PDB). GIXRD results show that the increase in microstrain after helium irradiation is more pronounced at high doses. The observed S parameters of PDB increase with the irradiation doses, which indicates a significant number of vacancy‐type defects, possibly helium‐vacancy clusters. For postimplantation annealing specimens, the microstrain characterized by GIXRD has recovered. The surprise is the S parameters that significantly increase, revealing that helium atoms trapped at unstable helium‐vacancy clusters desorb during annealing, contributing to the growth of helium bubbles. These findings of microstrain mechanisms and vacancy‐type defects behaviors give us new insights into the helium irradiation evaluation.

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