Adhesion of voids to bimetal interfaces with non-uniform energies

Interface engineering has become an important strategy for designing radiation-resistant materials. Critical to its success is fundamental understanding of the interactions between interfaces and radiation-induced defects, such as voids. Using transmission electron microscopy, here we report an inte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zheng, Shijian (Author), Shao, Shuai (Author), Zhang, Jian (Author), Wang, Yongqiang (Author), Demkowicz, Michael J. (Contributor), Beyerlein, Irene J. (Author), Mara, Nathan A. (Author)
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering (Contributor)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group, 2015-12-28T14:16:19Z.
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Summary:Interface engineering has become an important strategy for designing radiation-resistant materials. Critical to its success is fundamental understanding of the interactions between interfaces and radiation-induced defects, such as voids. Using transmission electron microscopy, here we report an interesting phenomenon in their interaction, wherein voids adhere to only one side of the bimetal interfaces rather than overlapping them. We show that this asymmetrical void-interface interaction is a consequence of differing surface energies of the two metals and non-uniformity in their interface formation energy. Specifically, voids grow within the phase of lower surface energy and wet only the high-interface energy regions. Furthermore, because this outcome cannot be accounted for by wetting of interfaces with uniform internal energy, our report provides experimental evidence that bimetal interfaces contain non-uniform internal energy distributions. This work also indicates that to design irradiation-resistant materials, we can avoid void-interface overlap via tuning the configurations of interfaces.
United States. Dept. of Energy. Office of Basic Energy Sciences. Center for Materials at Irradiation and Mechanical Extremes (Award 2008LANL1026)