Micropillar Compression of Additively Manufactured 316L Stainless Steels after 2 MeV Proton Irradiation: A Comparison Study between Planar and Cross-Sectional Micropillars Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • A micropillar compression study with two different techniques was performed on proton-irradiated additively manufactured (AM) 316L stainless steels. The sample was irradiated at 360 C using 2 MeV protons to 1.8 average displacement per atom (dpa) in the near-surface region. A comparison study with mechanical test and microstructure characterization was made between planar and cross-sectional pillars prepared from the irradiated surface. While a 2 MeV proton irradiation creates a relatively flat damage zone up to 12 m, the dpa gradient by a factor of 2 leads to significant dpa uncertainty along the pillar height direction for the conventional planar technique. Cross-sectional pillars can significantly reduce such dpa uncertainty. From one single sample, three cross-sectional pillars were able to show dpa-dependent hardening. Furthermore, post-compression transmission electron microscopy allows the determination of the deformation mechanism of individual micropillars. Cross-sectional micropillar compression can be used to study radiation-induced mechanical property changes with better resolution and less data fluctuation.

published proceedings

  • METALS

author list (cited authors)

  • Shiau, C., Pena, M., Li, Y., Xiang, S., Sun, C., McMurtrey, M. D., & Shao, L.

citation count

  • 1

complete list of authors

  • Shiau, Ching-Heng||Pena, Miguel||Li, Yongchang||Xiang, Sisi||Sun, Cheng||McMurtrey, Michael D||Shao, Lin

publication date

  • October 2022

publisher

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