Abstract

In the last ten years amorphous alumina coatings, deposited by Pulsed Laser Deposition, emerged as potential key enabling technology in the fields of heavy liquid metal fast reactors (lead and lead-bismuth) and fusion. In the former, as coating of the steel fuel cladding and in the latter as multifunctional coating providing a barrier against tritium permeation, steel corrosion and electrical insulation. Nevertheless, a detailed knowledge of the behavior of this thermodynamically metastable material at high temperatures and under neutron irradiation is still unknown. A knowledge gap that is mandatory to fill up for the deployment of this barrier technology. In the present work, we present a first step towards this goal, by the in-situ dynamic observation of the radiation induced crystallization processes of thin films of amorphous Al2O3, induced by ion-irradiation over an extensive range of temperatures (400-800 °C). The study was performed at the Intermediate Voltage Electron Microscope (IVEM)-Tandem Facility at Argonne National Laboratory. The experimental findings allow to elucidate the dependence of the grain growth on ion dose and temperature. A kinetic approach has been used to derive the process activation energies and other important parameters.

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