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1.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 7572, 2021 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33828109

ABSTRACT

The development of appropriate materials for fusion reactors that can sustain high neutron fluence at elevated temperatures remains a great challenge. Tungsten is one of the promising candidate materials for plasma-facing components of future fusion reactors, due to several favorable properties as for example a high melting point, a high sputtering resistivity, and a low coefficient of thermal expansion. The microstructural details of a tungsten sample with a 1.25 dpa (displacements per atom) damage dose after neutron irradiation at 800 °C were examined by transmission electron microscopy. Three types of radiation-induced defects were observed, analyzed and characterized: (1) voids with sizes ranging from 10 to 65 nm, (2) dislocation loops with a size of up to 10 nm and (3) W-Re-Os containing σ- and χ-type precipitates. The distribution of voids as well as the nature of the occurring dislocation loops were studied in detail. In addition, nano-chemical analyses revealed that the σ- and χ-type precipitates, which are sometimes attached to voids, are surrounded by a solid solution cloud enriched with Re. For the first time the crystallographic orientation relationship of the σ- and χ-phases to the W-matrix was specified. Furthermore, electron energy-loss spectroscopy could not unambiguously verify the presence of He within individual voids.

2.
Dalton Trans ; 49(1): 131-135, 2020 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31793576

ABSTRACT

The search for tunable, size-dependent properties and unique processability has triggered the development of new synthetic routes for transition metal borides. MnB is a soft to semi-hard ferromagnetic material. This boride is now available by bottom-up, low-temperature solution chemistry. It is obtained as an unexpected metastable α'-variant that crystallises with a stacking-fault dominated CrB-type structure, as shown by transmission electron microscopy and X-ray powder diffraction (space group Cmcm, a = 300.5(8), b = 768.6(2), and c = 295.3(4) pm). The nanostructured powder consists of agglomerates of small particles (mean diameter of 85(41) nm) and transforms into well-known ß-MnB with FeB-type structure at 1523 K. The room temperature ferromagnetic behavior (TC = 545 K) is attributed to the positive exchange-correlation between the manganese atoms, that have many unpaired d electrons.

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