Abstract

Metal hydrides can store hydrogen isotopes with high volumetric density. In metal tritides, tritium beta decay can result in accumulation of helium within the solid, in some cases exceeding 10 at.% helium after only 4 years of aging. Helium is insoluble in most materials, but often does not readily escape, and instead coalesces to form nanoscale bubbles when helium concentrations are near 1 at.%. Blistering or spallation often occurs at higher concentrations. Radioactive particles shed during this process present a potential safety hazard. This study investigates the effects of high helium concentrations on erbium deuteride (ErD2), a non-radioactive surrogate material for erbium tritide (ErT2). To simulate tritium decay in the surrogate, high doses of 120 keV helium ions were implanted into ErD2 films at room temperature. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy indicated spherical helium bubble formation at a critical concentration of 1.5 at.% and bubble linkage leading to nanoscale crack formation at a concentration of 7.5 at.%. Crack propagation occurred through the nanocrack region, resulting in spallation extending from the implantation peak to the surface. Electron energy loss spectroscopy was utilized to confirm the presence of high-pressure helium in the nanocracks, suggesting that helium gas plays a predominant role in deformation. This work improves the overall understanding of helium behavior in ErD2 by using modern characterization techniques to determine: the critical helium concentration required for bubble formation, the material failure mechanism at high concentration, and the nanoscale mechanisms responsible for material failure in helium implanted ErD2.

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