Abstract

Explicit method to emulate neutron radiation effects on key ceramic materials is lacking, with most literatures stressing direct comparison between radiation parameters while underestimating the defect-property correlation. Herein, the evolutionary correlation between defects of displaced atoms and properties in 6H-SiC was systematically investigated, aiming to found the basis for performance assessment of neutron irradiated material. The point defect accumulation, defect cluster growth, and homogeneous crystalline-amorphous (c-a) transition were recognized, with different stages of Young’s modulus reduction and optical absorption enhancement accordingly triggered. Specifically, the relaxation process accompanying the c-a transition was believed to induce the final reduction stage of Young’s modulus and account for the conflict between existing research results. Average lattice disorder, regarded as the average density of displaced atoms, was proved to be the success reference in the property assessment approach, paving the way for the extension into high temperature radiation where more defect types coexist.

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