npj Materials Degradation (Aug 2024)

Microstructurally resolved electrochemical evolution of mechanical- and irradiation-induced damage in nuclear alloys

  • Xin Chen,
  • Marta Pozuelo,
  • Maxim Gussev,
  • Matthew Chancey,
  • Yongqiang Wang,
  • Magdalena Balonis,
  • Mathieu Bauchy,
  • Gaurav Sant

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41529-024-00500-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract There is a need for high-throughput, scale-relevant, and direct electrochemical analysis to understand the corrosion behavior and sensitivity of nuclear materials that are exposed to extreme (high pressure, temperature, and radiation exposure) environments. We demonstrate the multi-scale, multi-modal application of scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) to electrochemically profile corrosion alterations in nuclear alloys in a microstructurally resolved manner. Particularly, we identify that both mechanically deformed and irradiated microstructures show reduced charge-transfer resistance that leads to accelerated oxidation. We highlight that the effects of mechanical deformation and irradiation are synergistic, and may in fact, superimpose each other, with implications including general-, galvanic-, and/or irradiation-activated stress-corrosion cracking. Taken together, we highlight the ability of non-destructive, electrochemical interrogations to ascertain how microstructural alterations result in changes in the corrosion tendency of a nuclear alloy: knowledge which has implications to rank, qualify and examine alloys for use in nuclear construction applications.