Publication | Closed Access
Designing Radiation Resistance in Materials for Fusion Energy
733
Citations
140
References
2014
Year
EngineeringRadiation Materials ScienceFusion PowerFusion MaterialsComputational ThermodynamicsCeramic Matrix CompositeStructural MaterialsFusion Reactor MaterialMaterials EngineeringMaterials ScienceFusion EnergyRadiation EffectsStructural CeramicMicrostructureNuclear CeramicHigh Temperature MaterialsAlloy DesignFusion Reactor ConceptsMetal-ceramic SystemsFusion System Design
Proposed fusion and advanced (Generation IV) fission energy systems require high-performance materials capable of satisfactory operation up to neutron damage levels approaching 200 atomic displacements per atom with large amounts of transmutant hydrogen and helium isotopes. After a brief overview of fusion reactor concepts and radiation effects phenomena in structural and functional (nonstructural) materials, three fundamental options for designing radiation resistance are outlined: Utilize matrix phases with inherent radiation tolerance, select materials in which vacancies are immobile at the design operating temperatures, or engineer materials with high sink densities for point defect recombination. Environmental and safety considerations impose several additional restrictions on potential materials systems, but reduced-activation ferritic/martensitic steels (including thermomechanically treated and oxide dispersion–strengthened options) and silicon carbide ceramic composites emerge as robust structural materials options. Materials modeling (including computational thermodynamics) and advanced manufacturing methods are poised to exert a major impact in the next ten years.
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