Nuclear Materials and Energy (Mar 2022)
Microstructure-informed prediction and measurement of nanoindentation hardness of an Fe-9Cr alloy irradiated with Fe-ions of 1 and 5 MeV energy
Abstract
Hardening of Fe-9%Cr alloys exposed to irradiation with Fe2+ ions of two different energies, 1 and 5 MeV, is investigated using nanoindentation. The limited penetration depth of the ions causes steep damage gradients in the near-surface volumes of the irradiated samples. This damage gives rise to graded microstructures resulting in depth-dependent irradiation hardening. Nanoindentation integrates the depth-dependent hardness over the indentation plastic zone. Our study combines quantitative analysis of the ion-irradiated microstructures with the determination of the full depth dependence of irradiation hardening. The microstructure-informed model incorporates direct experimental evidence revealed by a former investigation using cross-sectional scanning transmission electron microscopy. For both ion energies, the observed microstructures consist of dislocation loops with band-like distributions and are concluded to be the dominant source of the measured irradiation-induced hardening. The model predictions are found to be in reasonable agreement with the as-measured nanoindentation response. The comparison of hardening predictions with different kinds of superposition rules of hardening contributions suggests linear superposition as the most appropriate selection under the present conditions. The possible transferability of these results to neutron irradiation is also discussed.