Materials (Jun 2024)

Temperature Effects of Nuclear and Electronic Stopping Power on Si and C Radiation Damage in 3C-SiC

  • Ewelina Kucal,
  • Przemysław Jóźwik,
  • Cyprian Mieszczyński,
  • René Heller,
  • Shavkat Akhmadaliev,
  • Christian Dufour,
  • Konrad Czerski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17122843
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
p. 2843

Abstract

Read online

Silicon carbide has been considered a material for use in the construction of advanced high-temperature nuclear reactors. However, one of the most important design issues for future reactors is the development of structural defects in SiC under a strong irradiation field at high temperatures. To understand how high temperatures affect radiation damage, SiC single crystals were irradiated at room temperature and after being heated to 800 °C with carbon and silicon ions of energies ranging between 0.5 and 21 MeV. The number of displaced atoms and the disorder parameters have been estimated by using the channeling Rutherford backscattering spectrometry. The experimentally determined depth profiles of induced defects at room temperature agree very well with theoretical calculations assuming its proportionality to the electronic and nuclear-stopping power values. On the other hand, a significant reduction in the number of crystal defects was observed for irradiations performed at high temperatures or for samples annealed after irradiation. Additionally, indications of saturation of the crystal defect concentration were observed for higher fluences and the irradiation of previously defected samples.

Keywords