Abstract

Passivating iron-oxide films are grown atop iron films simulating the corrosion process in a nuclear reactor environment. Two oxide films grown via physical vapor deposition at 600 °C and room temperature exhibited dense-epitactic and columnar-polycrystalline, microstructures respectively. A third oxide film grown in open air at 600 °C exhibited an eqiuaxed, porous morphology. Cubic maghemite and magnetite phases in each oxide film were identified via grazing incidence X-ray diffraction. Positron annihilation spectroscopy was used to characterize point defects and measure their depth and size distributions in each oxide layer and showed a range of average positron lifetimes from 0.23 ns in the high temperature, vapor deposited film, 0.35 ns in the room temperature-grown film, and 0.31 ns in the thermally grown oxide. These data indicate that the film morphology, which varies greatly in these films, leads to very different defect content. Finally, four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy was used to measure the internal stress of each film and was correlated to the strain state presented in the X-ray diffraction spectra. The defect formation in each film is reasoned through using a thin film growth model.

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