Abstract
Several classes of materials are being proposed for use in fusion reactors including oxide dispersion strengthened (ODS) and reduced activation ferritic-martensitic (RAF/M) steels to withstand the severe and harsh conditions. In this work, the mechanical properties of a Fe-16Cr-4Al-2W-0.3Ti-0.3Y2O3 (K3) (ODS) ferritic steel and a Fe-8.9Cr-1.1W-0.47Mn-0.2V-0.14Ta-0.11C (Eurofer 97) (RAF/M) steel) after triple ion beam irradiation were locally evaluated utilizing in-situ micro-pillar compression tests, and continuous stiffness/quasi-static nanoindentation. No change in mechanical properties was observed in the K3 ODS steel. However, the Eurofer 97 RAF/M steel exhibited radiation-induced effects via increases in yield strength. Micro-pillar techniques were expanded to neutron-irradiated materials via an in-situ testing technique employing lift-out methods on Fe-14Cr-0.9Ti-0.3Mo-0.25Y2O3 (MA957) ODS ferritic steel. Both the non-irradiated and irradiated compressive yield stresses of the MA 957 micro-pillars were in good agreement with bulk yield stress values reported in the literature, suggesting that the lift-out micro-pillar compression testing technique is a promising method. The demonstration of these techniques on ion beam and neutron irradiated ODS steels and ion beam RAF/M steels gives information to inform models of the material degradation during use in a fusion device.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 2134-2145 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | JOM |
Volume | 77 |
Issue number | 4 |
Early online date | Mar 3 2025 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Apr 2025 |
INL Publication Number
- INL/JOU-22-69297
- 140578