Comparative Study of Two Nanoindentation Approaches for Assessing Mechanical Properties of Ion-Irradiated Stainless Steel 316
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials and Microstructural Characterization
2.2. Radiation Damage Simulations
2.3. Irradiation of Samples
2.4. Nanoindentation
3. Results
3.1. Ion Damage Profiles Simulated by SRIM
- (i)
- With increasing ion beam energy, the authors observe an increase in the depth of the damage peak, as expected. Also observable in the near linear relationship between these two aspects, indicative of a direct proportionality.
- (ii)
- In the damage plots, at higher ion beam energy, the peak damage is slightly lower, and the peak is broader.
3.2. Radiation Hardening Profiles
3.2.1. ‘Top-Down’ Indentation Method
3.2.2. ‘Oblique Cross-Section’ Indentation Method
- (i)
- The hardness peaks increase in depth with increasing ion beam energy (i.e., with increasing depth of the displacement damage peak).
- (ii)
- The hardness at depths smaller than the peak hardness depth is higher than the base hardness, as expected, since this region undergoes a finite, albeit small, displacement damage. There is a distinct ‘plateau’ or ‘shoulder’ in this curve.
- (iii)
- The peak hardness initially increases with decreasing ion beam energy (3 MeV → 2 MeV), but decreases with further decrease in ion beam energy (2 MeV → 1 MeV).
3.2.3. Comparison of Hardening Profiles
- (i)
- The peaks of the ΔH plots for all irradiated samples are much closer to the displacement damage peaks for the respective ion energies in the ‘oblique cross-section’ method than in the ‘top-down’ method.
- (ii)
- The position of the ΔH peaks in the OCS method is more sensitive to the ion energy. The peaks of the ΔH plots move from~0.3 to 0.75 μm for the top-down method, while they move from ~0.65 to 3.55 μm in the OCS method, when the ion energy increases from 1 MeV to 3 MeV.
- (iii)
- The ΔH peaks in the OCS method are much sharper and more prominent for all ion energies, compared to those in the top-down method, for the 2 and 3 MeV irradiated samples.
- (iv)
- There is a well-defined shoulder region in the low dose area, followed by a peak, in the OCS method, while no such distinct regions corresponding to the regions of different dose are found in the top-down method.
3.3. Finite Element Modelling
- Blunting and deterioration of the Berkovich tip in the experimental tests, which do not align as well with the initial calibrated state
- A constant value of the strain hardening exponent in the model:The flow stress within the unirradiated material is assumed to adhere to a power law relation whereby , where A is a strength coefficient and n is the strain-hardening exponent, the authors had extrapolated the low dpa results in [19] to higher doses, but the choice to maintain a constant strain-hardening rate may result in an anomalous increase in reported values as seen in Figure 9. For greater correlation between the experimental results the authors note the irradiated flow stress model is better represented by
- The shallow nature of the indentation is more sensitive to the discretization of the mesh and the stratification of the flow stress formulation: this is highlighted by the inflection point present at a depth of 200 nm in Figure 9a, where the strength of the hardened layer is detected. The final load at peak hardness does not deviate too greatly from the reported experimental results (~7.5 mN for experimental vs. ~9.0 mN for the model at 250 nm), but the smooth transition in the experimental graph is in stark contrast to the model’s prediction. The authors believe that the results obtained at the shallow depth of the indentations used for the OCS method are greatly influenced by tip blunting and resultant changes in the area functions.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- (i)
- The top-down method is better suited when the ion beam energy is low, resulting in a shallow peak damage depth (<1 μm), since it has better spatial resolution due to the CSM mode of indentation employed in this technique.
- (ii)
- The OCS method is better suited for high energy ion irradiation, since it provides a closer approach of the hardness peak to the damage peak, and gives a sharp hardness peak for all ion energies. This is possible because of the shallow indentation depths in the OCS method.
- (iii)
- The height and the sharpness of the hardness peaks vary much less in the OCS method as compared to the top-down method, and this would be another reason for preferring this method over the top-down method for greater damage peak depths.
- (iv)
- The OCS method also enables examination of the hardness–damage correlation for the low damage region, by exhibiting a shoulder in the hardness–depth curve.
- (v)
- The radiation dependent hardening model used in the FE simulation was able to capture salient features of the indentation process, with good qualitative and quantitative agreement with the experimental results. Notably, the FE model highlighted the presence of a double dished plastic zone below the indenter for the ion irradiated samples.
- (vi)
- The models also show that the OCS method is more sensitive to the indenter orientation with strong indenter asymmetry amplified through the oblique sample mounting.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Parameter | Input |
---|---|
TRIM calculation method | Detailed calculation with full damage cascades |
Name of element | Helium |
Irradiation energy (keV) | 1000, 2000, 3000 |
Layer—stainless steel 316 | Stainless steel (typical) with Cr (16%) and Ni (10%) |
Displacement energy | 25 eV |
Ion Energy | Indentation Method | ΔHMax (GPa) | dHMax (μm) | dDamage (μm) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 MeV | OCS | 1.69 | 0.65 | 1.65 |
TD | 1.55 | 0.29 | ||
2 MeV | OCS | 2.62 | 2.15 | 3.2 |
TD | 1.32 | 0.48 | ||
3 MeV | OCS | 1.98 | 3.55 | 5.0 |
TD | 1.2 | 0.75 |
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Saleh, M.; Zaidi, Z.; Hurt, C.; Ionescu, M.; Munroe, P.; Bhattacharyya, D. Comparative Study of Two Nanoindentation Approaches for Assessing Mechanical Properties of Ion-Irradiated Stainless Steel 316. Metals 2018, 8, 719. https://doi.org/10.3390/met8090719
Saleh M, Zaidi Z, Hurt C, Ionescu M, Munroe P, Bhattacharyya D. Comparative Study of Two Nanoindentation Approaches for Assessing Mechanical Properties of Ion-Irradiated Stainless Steel 316. Metals. 2018; 8(9):719. https://doi.org/10.3390/met8090719
Chicago/Turabian StyleSaleh, Michael, Zain Zaidi, Christopher Hurt, Mihail Ionescu, Paul Munroe, and Dhriti Bhattacharyya. 2018. "Comparative Study of Two Nanoindentation Approaches for Assessing Mechanical Properties of Ion-Irradiated Stainless Steel 316" Metals 8, no. 9: 719. https://doi.org/10.3390/met8090719
APA StyleSaleh, M., Zaidi, Z., Hurt, C., Ionescu, M., Munroe, P., & Bhattacharyya, D. (2018). Comparative Study of Two Nanoindentation Approaches for Assessing Mechanical Properties of Ion-Irradiated Stainless Steel 316. Metals, 8(9), 719. https://doi.org/10.3390/met8090719