About this Abstract |
Meeting |
Materials Science & Technology 2020
|
Symposium
|
Advanced Characterization of Materials for Nuclear, Radiation, and Extreme Environments
|
Presentation Title |
In Situ Observation of Short- and Long-Timescale Material Property Evolution Under Extreme Conditions |
Author(s) |
Cody A. Dennett |
On-Site Speaker (Planned) |
Cody A. Dennett |
Abstract Scope |
Directly observing the evolution of material performance in-situ under extreme conditions remains a great challenge. Emergent behavior, such as the transition from incubation to steady state void swelling, is often difficult to capture in these conditions. To fill this gap, transient grating spectroscopy (TGS) has been used to collect multi-property information in-situ under high temperature exposure to ion beam irradiation. This all-optical method returns elastic and thermal transport properties with second-scale time resolution. Here, recent work using this methodology to track the evolution of Ni-based solid-solution alloys using the in situ ion irradiation TGS (I3TGS) beamline will be described. Tracking material property evolution during long exposure times (hours) provides a clear indication of when void swelling has occurred. On short timescales (seconds to minutes), observing rapid changes in thermoelastic properties as defect generation is initiated allows a unique window into bulk transient defect populations which are otherwise difficult to observe. |