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Abstract

Abstract

[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Small-scale testing techniques such as nanoindentation and micro-/nanocompression are promising methods for addressing mechanical properties of ion-beam-irradiated materials. We performed different proton irradiations and critically evaluated the results obtained from nanoindentation and pillar compression, both performed parallel and perpendicular to the irradiation direction. Experiments parallel to beam direction suffer from variation of material properties with penetration depth. This is improved by cross-sectional experiments, thereby probing the effect of different doses along the beam penetration depth on mechanical properties. Finally, we demonstrate that, compared with nanoindentation, miniaturized uniaxial compression experiments offer a more reliable and straightforward interpretation of the mechanical data, as they impose a nominally uniaxial stress on a well-defined volume at a specific position. Moreover, the exposed pillar geometry is not influenced by surface contamination and enables in situ observation of the governing mechanical processes, which is typically not possible during indentation experiments in a half-space geometry. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Application of small-scale testing for investigation of ion-beam-irradiated materials
Author
Kiener, Daniel; Minor, Andrew M; Anderoglu, Osman; Wang, Yongqiang; Maloy, Stuart A; Hosemann, Peter
Pages
2724-2736
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Nov 14, 2012
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
08842914
e-ISSN
20445326
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1326735905
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2012