Damage Induced by Helium Implantation in Silicon Carbide

Damage Induced by Helium Implantation in Silicon Carbide

Author: Stéphanie Leclerc

Publisher:

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 137

ISBN-13:

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In this work, the damage induced by helium implantation in silicon carbide has been studied through XRD and TEM experiments. Combining both XRD experiments and simulations has led us to obtain accurate strain profiles. Implantations have been performed from RT to elevated temperatures to a wide range of fluences. Implantation at RT has been shown to result in a complex picture with mechanisms related to both point defects and helium-vacancy complexes. In particular, helium-vacancy complexes have been seen to strongly influence the strain profile for a concentration of helium exceeding 0.5%. Thresholds for the formation of layers of bubbles and amorphous material have been estimated. This latter depends on the energy of incident ions contrary to what is currently acknowledged. Experiments at elevated temperatures have pointed out two regimes in the damage production as a function of fluence. In the low fluence regime, dynamic annealing occurs in proportion to the defect density over the whole implanted zone. In the high fluence regime, in addition to the dynamic annealing, a migration of interstitial-type defects towards a highly damaged zone has been detected. Both phenomenon lead to a saturation in the near surface strain. Finally, annealing has been performed on the samples implanted at RT. Annealing stages of point defects have been distinguished and related to activation energies. During annealing, strong evolution of the microstructure has been seen to take place in the highly damaged zone. At medium fluences, platelets are formed that collapse into clusters of overpressurized bubbles. These latter induce loop punching which in turn, induces plastic deformation.


The Influence of Temperature, Fluence, Dose Rate, and Helium Production on Defect Accumulation and Swelling in Silicon Carbide

The Influence of Temperature, Fluence, Dose Rate, and Helium Production on Defect Accumulation and Swelling in Silicon Carbide

Author: A. Kohyama

Publisher:

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 11

ISBN-13:

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Swelling and microstructure of silicon carbide (SiC) are studied by means of MeV-range ion irradiation. The material used is chemical vapor deposited high purity polycrystalline cubic (3C)-SiC. The swelling behavior is characterized by precision interferometric profilometry following ion bombardment to the diamond-finished surface over a molybdenum micro-mesh. Irradiation was carried out at temperatures up to 873 K, followed by profilometry at room temperature. Microstructural characterization by means of cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy has also been finished for selected materials. Irradiation induced swelling was increased with increasing the displacement damage level up to 0.3 dpa at all evaluated temperatures. At 333 K, the swelling was increased with increasing the damage level up to 1 dpa, and irradiation-induced amorphization was observed over 1.07 dpa. At the higher irradiation temperature, swelling was saturated over 0.3 dpa. The temperature dependence of saturated swelling obtained so far appeared very close to the neutron irradiation data. For the study of the synergism of displacement damage and helium production, a dual-beam experiment was performed up to 100 dpa at 873 K. Swelling of the dual-beam irradiated specimen was larger than that of single-beam irradiated specimen. The result also suggested the onset of unsteady swelling in high He/dpa conditions after "saturated point defect swelling" is once achieved at displacement damage levels over 50 dpa.


Mechanical Properties and Performance of Engineering Ceramics and Composites IV, Volume 30, Issue 2

Mechanical Properties and Performance of Engineering Ceramics and Composites IV, Volume 30, Issue 2

Author: Dileep Singh

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2009-12-15

Total Pages: 350

ISBN-13: 0470584254

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Gain insight into the mechanical properties and performance of engineering ceramics and composites. This collection of articles illustrates the Mechanical Behavior and Performance of Ceramics & Composites symposium, which included over 100 presentations representing 10 countries. The symposium addressed the cutting-edge topics on mechanical properties and reliability of ceramics and composites and their correlations to processing, microstructure, and environmental effects.