Skyrmions and antiskyrmions are nanoscale swirling textures of magnetic moments formed by chiral interactions between atomic spins in magnetic noncentrosymmetric materials and multilayer films with broken inversion symmetry. These quasiparticles are of interest for use as information carriers in next-generation, low-energy spintronic applications. To develop skyrmion-based memory and logic, we must understand skyrmion-defect interactions with two main goals—determining how skyrmions navigate intrinsic material defects and determining how to engineer disorder for optimal device operation. Here, we introduce a tunable means of creating a skyrmion-antiskyrmion system by engineering the disorder landscape in FeGe using ion irradiation. Specifically, we irradiate epitaxial B20-phase FeGe films with 2.8 MeV Au4+ ions at varying fluences, inducing amorphous regions within the crystalline matrix. Using low-temperature electrical transport and magnetization measurements, we observe a strong topological Hall effect with a double-peak feature that serves as a signature of skyrmions and antiskyrmions. These results are a step towards the development of information storage devices that use skyrmions and antiskyrmions as storage bits, and our system may serve as a testbed for theoretically predicted phenomena in skyrmion-antiskyrmion crystals.
Nanocrystalline metals are inherently unstable against thermal and mechanical stimuli, commonly resulting in significant grain growth. Also, while these metals exhibit substantial Hall-Petch strengthening, they tend to suffer from low ductility and fracture toughness. With regard to the grain growth problem, alloying elements have been employed to stabilize the microstructure through kinetic and/or thermodynamic mechanisms. And to address the ductility challenge, spatially-graded grain size distributions have been developed to facilitate heterogeneous deformation modes: high-strength at the surface and plastic deformation in the bulk. In the present work, we combine these two strategies and present a new methodology for the fabrication of gradient nanostructured metals via compositional means. We have demonstrated that annealing a compositionally stepwise Pt-Au film with a homogenous microstructure results in a film with a spatial microstructural gradient, exhibiting grains which can be twice as wide in the bulk compared to the outer surfaces. Additionally, phase-field modeling was employed for the comparison with experimental results and for further investigation of the competing mechanisms of Au diffusion and thermally induced grain growth. This fabrication method offers an alternative approach for developing the next generation of microstructurally stable gradient nanostructured films.
Under high-cycle fatigue conditions, a fatigue crack in nanocrystalline Pt was observed to undergo healing. The healing appears to occur by cold welding, facilitated by grain boundary migration, and also by local closure stresses. The healing may help explain several observations: role of air (or vacuum) on fatigue life, impeded subsurface fatigue cracking, apparent flaw healing in sub-critical cycling of ceramics, the existence of a fatigue threshold, and the role of vacuum on the fatigue threshold.
An in situ ion irradiation scanning electron microscope (I3SEM) has been developed, installed, and integrated into the Ion Beam Laboratory at Sandia National Laboratories. The I3SEM facility combines a field emission, variable pressure, scanning electron microscope, a 6 MV tandem accelerator, high flux low energy ion source, an 808 nm-wavelength laser, and multiple stages to control the thermal and mechanical state of the sample observed. The facility advances real-time understanding of materials evolution under combined environments at the mesoscale. As highlighted in multiple examples, this unique combination of tools is optimized for studying mesoscale material response in overlapping extreme environments, allowing for simultaneous ion irradiation, implantation, laser bombardment, conductive heating, cooling, and mechanical deformation.
Metal-oxide composites are commonly used in high temperature environments for their thermal stability and high melting points. Commonly employed with refractory oxides or carbides such as ZrC and HfC, these materials may be improved with the use of a low density, high melting point ceramic such as CeO2. In this work, the consolidation of W-CeO2 metal matrix composites in the high CeO2 concentration regime is explored. The CeO2 concentrations of 50, 33, and 25 wt.%, the CeO2 particle size from nanometer to micrometer, and various hot isostatic pressing temperatures are investigated. Decreasing the CeO2 concentration is observed to increase the composite density and increase the Vickers hardness. The CeO2 oxidation state is observed to be a combination of Ce3+ and Ce4+, which is hypothesized to contribute to the porosity of the composites. The hardness of the metal-oxide composite can be improved more than 2.5 times compared to pure W processed by the same route. This work offers processing guidelines for further consolation of oxide-doped W composites.
The dynamics of the gold–silicon eutectic reaction in limited dimensions were studied using in situ transmission electron microscopy and scanning transmission electron microscopy heating experiments. The phase transformation, viewed in both plan-view and cross-section of the film, occurs through a complex combination of dislocation and grain boundary motion and diffusion of silicon along gold grain boundaries, which results in a dramatic change in the microstructure of the film. The conversion observed in cross-section shows that the eutectic mixture forms at the Au–Si interface and proceeds into the Au film at a discontinuous growth rate. This complex process can lead to a variety of microstructures depending on sample geometry, heating temperature, and the ratio of gold to silicon which was found to have the largest impact on the eutectic microstructure. The eutectic morphology varied from dendrites to hollow rectangular structures to Au–Si eutectic agglomerates with increasing silicon to gold ratio. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
This paper describes a new non-charge-based data storing technique in NAND flash memory called watermark that encodes read-only data in the form of physical properties of flash memory cells. Unlike traditional charge-based data storing method in flash memory, the proposed technique is resistant to total ionizing dose (TID) effects. To evaluate its resistance to irradiation effects, we analyze data stored in several commercial single-level-cell (SLC) flash memory chips from different vendors and technology nodes. These chips are irradiated using a Co-60 gamma-ray source array for up to 100 krad(Si) at Sandia National Laboratories. Experimental evaluation performed on a flash chip from Samsung shows that the intrinsic bit error rate (BER) of watermark increases from mathbf {sim }0.8 % for TID = 0 krad(Si) to mathbf {mathrm {sim }}1 % for TID = 100 krad(Si). Conversely, the BER of charge-based data stored on the same chip increases from 0% at TID = 0 krad(Si) to 1.5% at TID = 100 krad(Si). The results imply that the proposed technique may potentially offer significant improvements in data integrity relative to traditional charge-based data storage for very high radiation (TID mathbf { > } 100 krad(Si)) environments. These gains in data integrity relative to the charge-based data storage are useful in radiation-prone environments, but they come at the cost of increased write times and higher BERs before irradiation.
Pfeifer, Thomas W.; Tomko, John A.; Hoglund, Eric; Scott, Ethan A.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Huynh, Kenny; Liao, Michael; Goorsky, Mark; Hopkins, Patrick E.
The thermal properties of semiconductors following exposure to ion irradiation are of great interest for the cooling of electronic devices; however, gradients in composition and structure due to irradiation often make the measurement difficult. Furthermore, the nature of spatial variations in thermal resistances due to spatially varying ion irradiation damage is not well understood. In this work, we develop an advancement in the analysis of time-domain thermoreflectance to account for spatially varying thermal conductivity in a material resulting from a spatial distribution of defects. We then use this method to measure the near-surface (≤1 μm) thermal conductivity of silicon wafers irradiated with Kr+ ions, which has an approximate Gaussian distribution centered 260 nm into the sample. Our numerical analysis presented here allows for the spatial gradient of thermal conductivity to be extracted via what is fundamentally a volumetric measurement technique. We validate our findings via transmission electron microscopy, which is able to confirm the spatial variation of the sub-surface silicon structure, and provide additional insight into the local structure resulting from the effects of ion bombardment. Thermal measurements found the ion stopping region to have a nearly 50 × reduction in thermal conductivity as compared to pristine silicon, while TEM showed the region was not fully amorphized. Our results suggest this drastic reduction in silicon thermal conductivity is primarily driven by structural defects in crystalline regions along with boundary scattering between amorphous and crystalline regions, with a negligible contribution being due to implanted krypton ions themselves.
Getto, E.; Johnson, M.; Maughan, M.; Nathan, N.; Mcmahan, J.; Baker, B.; Knipling, K.; Briggs, S.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Swenson, M.J.
The joining process for oxide dispersion strengthened (ODS) alloys remains a key challenge facing the nuclear community. The microstructure and mechanical properties were characterized in the base material and friction stir welded ODS MA956 irradiated with 5 MeV Fe2+ ions from 400 to 500°C up to 25 dpa. Nanoindentation was performed to assess changes in hardness and yield stress, and the dispersed barrier hardening (DBH) model was applied to described results. A combination of scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and atom probe tomography (APT) were used to assess evolution of the microstructure including dispersoids, network dislocations and dislocation loops, nanoclusters, and solid solution concentrations. Overall, softening was observed as a result of increased dose, which was exacerbated at 500°C. The formation and coarsening of new dispersoids was noted while nanoclusters tended to dissolve in the base material, and were not observed in the stir zone. Solute nanocluster evolution was identified as a primary driver of the changes in mechanical properties.
Cunningham, W.S.; Riano, J.S.; Wang, Wenbo; Hwang, Sooyeon; Hattar, Khalid M.; Hodge, Andrea M.; Trelewicz, Jason R.
Targeted doping of grain boundaries is widely pursued as a pathway for combating thermal instabilities in nanocrystalline metals. However, certain dopants predicted to produce grain-boundary-segregated nanocrystalline configurations instead form small nanoprecipitates at elevated temperatures that act to kinetically inhibit grain growth. Here, thermodynamic modeling is implemented to select the Mo–Au system for exploring the interplay between thermodynamic and kinetic contributions to nanostructure stability. Using nanoscale multilayers and in situ transmission electron microscopy thermal aging, evolving segregation states and the corresponding phase transitions are mapped with temperature. The microstructure is shown to evolve through a transformation at lower homologous temperatures (<600 °C) where solute atoms cluster and segregate to the grain boundaries, consistent with predictions from thermodynamic models. An increase in temperature to 800 °C is accompanied by coarsening of the grain structure via grain boundary migration but with multiple pinning events uncovered between migrating segments of the grain boundary and local solute clustering. Direct comparison between the thermodynamic predictions and experimental observations of microstructure evolution thus demonstrates a transition from thermodynamically preferred to kinetically inhibited nanocrystalline stability and provides a general framework for decoupling contributions to complex stability transitions while simultaneously targeting a dominant thermal stability regime.
There is a need to understand materials exposed to overlapping extreme environments such as high temperature, radiation, or mechanical stress. When these stressors are combined there may be synergistic effects that enable unique microstructural evolution mechanisms to activate. Understanding of these mechanisms is necessary for the input and refinement of predictive models and critical for engineering of next generation materials. The basic physics and underlying mechanisms require advanced tools to be investigated. The in situ ion irradiation transmission electron microscope (I³TEM) is designed to explore these principles. To quantitatively probe the complex dynamic interactions in materials, careful preparation of samples and consideration of experimental design is required. Particular handling or preparation of samples can easily introduce damage or features that obfuscate the measurements. There is no one correct way to prepare a sample; however, many mistakes can be made. The most common errors and things to consider are highlighted within. The I³TEM has many adjustable variables and a large potential experimental space, therefore it is best to design experiments with a specific scientific question or questions in mind. Experiments have been performed on large number of sample geometries, material classes, and with many irradiation conditions. The following are a subset of examples that demonstrate unique in situ capabilities utilizing the I3TEM. Au nanoparticles prepared by drop casting have been used to investigate the effects of single ion strikes. Au thin films have been used in studies on the effects of multibeam irradiation on microstructure evolution. Zr films have been exposed to irradiation and mechanical tension to examine creep. Ag nanopillars were subjected to simultaneous high temperature, mechanical compression, and ion irradiation to study irradiation induced creep as well. These results impact fields including: structural materials, nuclear energy, energy storage, catalysis, and microelectronics in space environments.
Metals subjected to irradiation environments undergo microstructural evolution and concomitant degradation, yet the nanoscale mechanisms for such evolution remain elusive. Here, we combine in situ heavy ion irradiation, atomic resolution microscopy, and atomistic simulation to elucidate how radiation damage and interfacial defects interplay to control grain boundary (GB) motion. While classical notions of boundary evolution under irradiation rest on simple ideas of curvature-driven motion, the reality is far more complex. Focusing on an ion-irradiated Pt Σ3 GB, we show how this boundary evolves by the motion of 120° facet junctions separating nanoscale {112} facets. Our analysis considers the short- and mid-range ion interactions, which roughen the facets and induce local motion, and longer-range interactions associated with interfacial disconnections, which accommodate the intergranular misorientation. We suggest how climb of these disconnections could drive coordinated facet junction motion. These findings emphasize that both local and longer-range, collective interactions are important to understanding irradiation-induced interfacial evolution.
High‐Entropy Alloys (HEAs) are proposed as materials for a variety of extreme environments, including both fission and fusion radiation applications. To withstand these harsh environments, materials processing must be tailored to their given application, now achieved through additive manufacturing processes. However, radiation application opportunities remain limited due to an incomplete understanding of the effects of irradiation on HEA performance. In this letter, we investigate the response of additively manufactured refractory high‐entropy alloys (RHEAs) to helium (He) ion bombardment. Through analytical microscopy studies, we show the interplay between the alloy composition and the He bubble size and density to demonstrate how increasing the compositional complexity can limit the He bubble effects, but care must be taken in selecting the appropriate constituent elements.
Hattar, Khalid M.; Mcgieson, Isak; Bird, Victoriea L.; Barr, Christopher M.; Reed, Bryan W.; Mckeown, Joseph T.; Yi, Feng; Santala, M.K.
The crystallization of an amorphous Ag–In–Sb–Te (AIST) phase change material (PCM) is studied using multiple in situ imaging techniques to directly quantify crystal growth rates over a broad range of temperatures. The measurable growth rates span from ≈ 10–9 to ≈ 20 m/s. Recent results using dynamic transmission electron microscopy (TEM), a photoemission TEM technique, and TEM with sub-framed imaging are reported here and placed into the context of previous growth rate measurements on AIST. Dynamic TEM experiments show a maximum observed crystal growth rate for as-deposited films to be > 20 m/s. It is shown that crystal growth above the glass transition can be imaged in a TEM through use of subframing and a high-frame-rate direct electron detection camera. Challenges associated with the determination of temperature during in situ TEM experiments are described. Preliminary nanocalorimetry results demonstrate the feasibility of collecting thermodynamic data for crystallization of PCMs with simultaneous TEM imaging. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
Understanding of structural and morphological evolution in nanomaterials is critical in tailoring their functionality for applications such as energy conversion and storage. Here, we examine irradiation effects on the morphology and structure of amorphous TiO2 nanotubes in comparison with their crystalline counterpart, anatase TiO2 nanotubes, using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM), in situ ion irradiation TEM, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Anatase TiO2 nanotubes exhibit morphological and structural stability under irradiation due to their high concentration of grain boundaries and surfaces as defect sinks. On the other hand, amorphous TiO2 nanotubes undergo irradiation-induced crystallization, with some tubes remaining only partially crystallized. The partially crystalline tubes bend due to internal stresses associated with densification during crystallization as suggested by MD calculations. These results present a novel irradiation-based pathway for potentially tuning structure and morphology of energy storage materials. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
This article analyzes the total ionizing dose (TID) effects on noise characteristics of commercial multi-level-cell (MLC) 3-D NAND memory technology during the read operation. The chips were exposed to a Co-60 gamma-ray source for up to 100 krad(Si) of TID. We find that the number of noisy cells in the irradiated chip increases with TID. Bit-flip noise was more dominant for cells in an erased state during irradiation compared to programmed cells.
In this article, we provide an analytical model for the total ionizing dose (TID) effects on the bit error statistics of commercial flash memory chips. We have validated the model with experimental data collected by irradiating several commercial NAND flash memory chips from different technology nodes. We find that our analytical model can project bit errors at higher TID values [20 krad (Si)] from measured data at lower TID values [<1 krad (Si)]. Based on our model and the measured data, we have formulated basic design rules for using a commercial flash memory chip as a dosimeter. We discuss the impact of NAND chip-to-chip variability, noise margin, and the intrinsic errors on the dosimeter design using detailed experimentation.
This article evaluates the data retention characteristics of irradiated multilevel-cell (MLC) 3-D NAND flash memories. We irradiated the memory chips by a Co-60 gamma-ray source for up to 50 krad(Si) and then wrote a random data pattern on the irradiated chips to find their retention characteristics. The experimental results show that the data retention property of the irradiated chips is significantly degraded when compared to the un-irradiated ones. We evaluated two independent strategies to improve the data retention characteristics of the irradiated chips. The first method involves high-temperature annealing of the irradiated chips, while the second method suggests preprogramming the memory modules before deploying them into radiation-prone environments.
Kiani, Mehrdad T.; Gan, Lucia T.; Traylor, Rachel; Yang, Rui; Barr, Christopher M.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Fan, Jonathan A.; Wendy Gu, X.
Grain boundaries have complex structural features that influence strength, ductility and fracture in metals and alloys. Grain boundary misorientation angle has been identified as a key parameter that controls their mechanical behavior, but the effect of misorientation angle has been challenging to isolate in polycrystalline materials. Here, we describe the use of bicrystal Au thin films made using a rapid melt growth process to study deformation at a single grain boundary. Tensile testing is performed on bicrystals with different misorientation angles using in situ TEM, as well as on a single crystalline sample. Plastic deformation is initiated through dislocation nucleation from free surfaces. Grain boundary sliding is not observed, and failure occurs away from the grain boundary through plastic collapse in all cases. The failure behavior in these nanoscale bicrystals does not appear to depend on the misorientation angle or grain boundary energy but instead has a more complex dependence on sample surface structure and dislocation activity.
Alloying is often employed to stabilize nanocrystalline materials against microstructural coarsening. The stabilization process results from the combined effects of thermodynamically reducing the curvature-dominated driving force of grain-boundary motion via solute segregation and kinetically pinning these same grain boundaries by solute drag and Zener pinning. The competition between these stabilization mechanisms depends not only on the grain-boundary character but can also be affected by imposed compositional and thermal fields that further promote or inhibit grain growth. In this work, we study the origin of the stability of immiscible nanocrystalline alloys in both homogeneous and heterogeneous compositional and thermal fields by using a multi-phase-field formulation for anisotropic grain growth with grain-boundary character-dependent segregation properties. This generalized formulation allows us to model the distribution of mobilities of segregated grain boundaries and the role of grain-boundary heterogeneity on solute-induced stabilization. As an illustration, we compare our model predictions to experimental results of microstructures in platinum-gold nanocrystalline alloys. Our results reveal that increasing the initial concentration of available solute progressively slows the rate of grain growth via both heterogeneous grain-boundary segregation and Zener pinning, while increasing the temperature generally weakens thermodynamic stabilization effects due to entropic contributions. Finally, we demonstrate as a proof-of-concept that spatially-varying compositional and thermal fields can be used to construct dynamically-stable, graded, nanostructured materials. We discuss the implications of using such concepts as alternatives to conventional plastic deformation methods.
The Fusion Energy Sciences office supported “A Pilot Program for Research Traineeships to Broaden and Diversify Fusion Energy Sciences” at Sandia National Laboratories during the summer of 2021. This pilot project was motivated in part by the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee report observation that “The multidisciplinary workforce needed for fusion energy and plasma science requires that the community commit to the creation and maintenance of a healthy climate of diversity, equity, and inclusion, which will benefit the community as a whole and the mission of FES”. The pilot project was designed to work with North Carolina A&T (NCAT) University and leverage SNL efforts in FES to engage underrepresented students in developing and accessing advanced material solutions for plasma facing components in fusion systems. The intent was to create an environment conducive to the development of a sense of belonging amongst participants, foster a strong sense of physics identity among the participants, and provide financial support to enable students to advance academically while earning money. The purpose of this assessment is to review what worked well and lessons that can be learned. We reviewed implementation and execution of the pilot, describe successes and areas for improvement and propose a no-cost extension of the pilot project to apply these lessons and continue engagement activities in the summer of 2022.
The dynamic interactions of ions with matter drive a host of complex evolution mechanisms, requiring monitoring on short spatial and temporal scales to gain a full picture of a material response. Understanding the evolution of materials under ion irradiation and displacement damage is vital for many fields, including semiconductor processing, nuclear reactors, and space systems. Despite materials in service having a dynamic response to radiation damage, typical characterization is performed post-irradiation, washing out all information from transient processes. Characterizing active processes in situ during irradiation allows the mechanisms at play during the dynamic ion-material interaction process to be deciphered. In this review, we examine the in situ characterization techniques utilized for examining material structure, composition, and property evolution under ion irradiation. Covering analyses of microstructure, surface composition, and material properties, this work offers a perspective on the recent advances in methods for in situ monitoring of materials under ion irradiation, including a future outlook examining the role of complementary and combined characterization techniques in understanding dynamic materials evolution.
Daly, Luke; Lee, Martin R.; Hallis, Lydia J.; Ishii, Hope A.; Bradley, John P.; Bland, Phillip A.; Saxey, David W.; Fougerouse, Denis; Rickard, William D.A.; Forman, Lucy V.; Timms, Nicholas E.; Jourdan, Fred; Reddy, Steven M.; Salge, Tobias; Zakaria; Quadir, Zakaria; Christou, Evangelos; Cox, Morgan A.; Aguiar, Jeffrey A.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Monterrosa, Anthony; Keller, Lindsay P.; Christoffersen, Roy; Dukes, Catherine A.; Loeffler, Mark J.; Thompson, Michelle S.
The isotopic composition of water in Earth’s oceans is challenging to recreate using a plausible mixture of known extraterrestrial sources such as asteroids—an additional isotopically light reservoir is required. The Sun’s solar wind could provide an answer to balance Earth’s water budget. We used atom probe tomography to directly observe an average ~1 mol% enrichment in water and hydroxyls in the solar-wind-irradiated rim of an olivine grain from the S-type asteroid Itokawa. We also experimentally confirm that H+ irradiation of silicate mineral surfaces produces water molecules. These results suggest that the Itokawa regolith could contain ~20 l m−3 of solar-wind-derived water and that such water reservoirs are probably ubiquitous on airless worlds throughout our Galaxy. The production of this isotopically light water reservoir by solar wind implantation into fine-grained silicates may have been a particularly important process in the early Solar System, potentially providing a means to recreate Earth’s current water isotope ratios.
Wang, Fei; Yan, Xueliang; Chen, Xin; Snyder, Nathan; Nastasi, Michael; Hattar, Khalid M.; Cui, Bai
The solid-state joining of oxide-dispersion-strengthened (ODS) austenitic steels was achieved using a pulsed electric current joining (PECJ) process. Microstructures of the austenitic grain structures and oxide dispersions in the joint areas were characterized using electron microscopy. Negligible grain growth was observed in austenitic grain structures, while slight coarsening of oxide dispersions occurred at a short holding time. The mechanisms of the PECJ process may involve three steps that occur simultaneously, including the sintering of mechanical alloying powders in the bonding layer, formation of oxide dispersions, and bonding of the mechanical alloying powders with the base alloy. The high hardness and irradiation resistance of ODS alloys were retained in the joint areas. This research revealed the fundamental mechanisms during the PECJ process, which is beneficial for its potential applications during the advanced manufacturing of ODS alloys.
Dennett, Cody A.; Dacus, Benjamin R.; Barr, Christopher M.; Clark, Trevor; Bei, Hongbin; Zhang, Yanwen; Short, Michael P.; Hattar, Khalid M.
Defects and microstructural features spanning the atomic level to the microscale play deterministic roles in the expressed properties of materials. Yet studies of material evolution in response to environmental stimuli most often correlate resulting performance with one dominant microstructural feature only. Here, the dynamic evolution of swelling in a series of Ni-based concentrated solid solution alloys under high-temperature irradiation exposure is observed using continuous, in situ measurements of thermoelastic properties in bulk specimens. Unlike traditional evaluation techniques which account only for volumetric porosity identified using electron microscopy, direct property evaluation provides an integrated response across all defect length scales. In particular, the evolution in elastic properties during swelling is found to depend significantly on the entire size spectrum of defects, from the nano- to meso-scales, some of which are not resolvable in imaging. Observed changes in thermal transport properties depend sensitively on the partitioning of electronic and lattice thermal conductivity. This emerging class of in situ experiments, which directly measure integrated performance in relevant conditions, provides unique insight into material dynamics otherwise unavailable using traditional methods.
Metal hydrides can store hydrogen isotopes with high volumetric density. In metal tritides, tritium beta decay can result in accumulation of helium within the solid, in some cases exceeding 10 at.% helium after only 4 years of aging. Helium is insoluble in most materials, but often does not readily escape, and instead coalesces to form nanoscale bubbles when helium concentrations are near 1 at.%. Blistering or spallation often occurs at higher concentrations. Radioactive particles shed during this process present a potential safety hazard. This study investigates the effects of high helium concentrations on erbium deuteride (ErD2), a non-radioactive surrogate material for erbium tritide (ErT2). To simulate tritium decay in the surrogate, high doses of 120 keV helium ions were implanted into ErD2 films at room temperature. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy indicated spherical helium bubble formation at a critical concentration of 1.5 at.% and bubble linkage leading to nanoscale crack formation at a concentration of 7.5 at.%. Additionally, crack propagation occurred through the nanocrack region, resulting in spallation extending from the implantation peak to the surface. Electron energy loss spectroscopy was utilized to confirm the presence of high-pressure helium in the nanocracks, suggesting that helium gas plays a predominant role in deformation. This work improves the overall understanding of helium behavior in ErD2 by using modern characterization techniques to determine: the critical helium concentration required for bubble formation, the material failure mechanism at high concentration, and the nanoscale mechanisms responsible for material failure in helium implanted ErD2.
A synthesis process is presented for experimentally simulating modifications in cosmic dust grains using sequential ion implantations or irradiations followed by thermal annealing. Cosmic silicate dust analogues were prepared via implantation of 20–80 keV Fe−, Mg−, and O− ions into commercially available p-type silicon (100) wafers. The as-implanted analogues are amorphous with a Mg/(Fe + Mg) ratio of 0.5 tailored to match theoretical abundances in circumstellar dusts. Before the ion implantations were performed, Monte-Carlo-based ion-solid interaction codes were used to model the dynamic redistribution of the implanted atoms in the silicon substrate. 600 keV helium ion irradiation was performed on one of the samples before thermal annealing. Two samples were thermally annealed at a temperature appropriate for an M-class stellar wind, 1000 K, for 8.3 h in a vacuum chamber with a pressure of 1 × 10−7 torr. The elemental depth profiles were extracted utilizing Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry (RBS) in the samples before and after thermal annealing. X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis was employed for the identification of various phases in crystalline minerals in the annealed analogues. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis was utilized to identify specific crystal structures. RBS analysis shows redistribution of the implanted Fe, Mg, and O after thermal annealing due to incorporation into the crystal structures for each sample type. XRD patterns along with TEM analysis showed nanocrystalline Mg and Fe oxides with possible incorporation of additional silicate minerals.
Stainless steel TPBAR components undergo neutron radiation-induced segregation and dislocation loop formation. Comparison experiments with ion beams accelerate the damage, and visualize the damage process with in-situ microscopy. In-situ Au irradiation causes defect formation, but no elemental segregation.
Jawaharram, Gowtham S.; Barr, Christopher M.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Dillon, Shen J.
A series of nanopillar compression tests were performed on tungsten as a function of temperature using in situ transmission electron microscopy with localized laser heating. Surface oxidation was observed to form on the pillars and grow in thickness with increasing temperature. Deformation between 850◦C and 1120◦C is facilitated by long-range diffusional transport from the tungsten pillar onto adjacent regions of the Y2O3-stabilized ZrO2 indenter. The constraint imposed by the surface oxidation is hypothesized to underly this mechanism for localized plasticity, which is generally the so-called whisker growth mechanism. The results are discussed in context of the tungsten fuzz growth mechanism in He plasma-facing environments. The two processes exhibit similar morphological features and the conditions under which fuzz evolves appear to satisfy the conditions necessary to induce whisker growth.
Zhang, Xiang; Wang, Fei; Yan, Xueliang; Li, Xing Z.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Cui, Bai
A nanostructured oxide-dispersion-strengthened (ODS) CoCrFeMnNi high-entropy alloy (HEA) is synthesized by a powder metallurgy process. The thermal stability, including the grain size and crystal structure of the HEA matrix and oxide dispersions, is carefully investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and electron microscopy characterizations after annealing at 900 °C. The limited grain growth may be attributed to Zener pinning of yttria dispersions that impede the grain boundary mobility and diffusivity. The high hardness is caused by both the fine grain size and yttria dispersions, which are also retained after annealing at 900 °C. Herein, it is implied that the combination of ODS and HEA concepts may provide a new design strategy for the development of thermally stable nanostructured alloys for extreme environments.
Nanostructures with a high density of interfaces, such as in nanoporous materials and nanowires, resist radiation damage by promoting the annihilation and migration of defects. This study details the size effect and origins of the radiation damage mechanisms in nanowires and nanoporous structures in model face-centered (gold) and body-centered (niobium) cubic nanostructures using accelerated multi-cascade atomistic simulations and in-situ ion irradiation experiments. Our results reveal three different size-dependent mechanisms of damage accumulation in irradiated nanowires and nanoporous structures: sputtering for very small nanowires and ligaments, the formation and accumulation of point defects and dislocation loops in larger nanowires, and a face-centered-cubic to hexagonal-close-packed phase transformation for a narrow range of wire diameters in the case of gold nanowires. Smaller nanowires and ligaments have a net effect of lowering the radiation damage as compared to larger wires that can be traced back to the fact that smaller nanowires transition from a rapid accumulation of defects to a saturation and annihilation mechanism at a lower dose than larger nanowires. These irradiation damage mechanisms are accompanied with radiation-induced surface roughening resulting from defect-surface interactions. Comparisons between nanowires and nanoporous structures show that the various mechanisms seen in nanowires provide adequate bounds for the defect accumulation mechanisms in nanoporous structures with the difference attributed to the role of nodes connecting ligaments in nanoporous structures. Taken together, our results shed light on the compounded, size-dependent mechanisms leading to the radiation resistance of nanowires and nanoporous structures.
Matthews, Bethany E.; Sassi, Michel; Barr, Christopher; Ophus, Colin; Kaspar, Tiffany C.; Jiang, Weilin; Hattar, Khalid M.; Spurgeon, Steven R.
Mastery of order-disorder processes in highly nonequilibrium nanostructured oxides has significant implications for the development of emerging energy technologies. However, we are presently limited in our ability to quantify and harness these processes at high spatial, chemical, and temporal resolution, particularly in extreme environments. Here, we describe the percolation of disorder at the model oxide interface LaMnO3/SrTiO3, which we visualize during in situ ion irradiation in the transmission electron microscope. We observe the formation of a network of disorder during the initial stages of ion irradiation and track the global progression of the system to full disorder. We couple these measurements with detailed structural and chemical probes, examining possible underlying defect mechanisms responsible for this unique percolative behavior.
Ajantiwalay, Tanvi; Nagel, Lauren; Maloy, Stuart; Hattar, Khalid M.; Mecholsky, John J.; Aitkaliyeva, Assel
Ferritic/martensitic steels, such as HT-9, are known for their complex microstructural features and mechanical properties. In this paper, in-situ micro-tensile tests and traditional fractography methods were utilized to study the fracture behavior of proton-irradiated HT-9 steels. First, to evaluate the viability of micro-tensile tests for nuclear material qualification process, meso‑tensile tests on as-received HT-9 steels were performed. Fracture mechanisms of unirradiated HT-9 steels at both length scales were compared and underlying mechanisms discussed. The direct comparison of micro- and meso‑scale data shows a distinctive size effect demonstrated by the increase in yield stress (YS). Upon completion of initial assessment, specimens were irradiated with 4 MeV+ protons to three fluences, all of which were lower than 0.01 displacements per atom (dpa). As expected, the YS increases with irradiation. However, at 7 × 10−3 dpa, the reversal of the trend was observed, and the YS exhibited sharp decline. We demonstrate that at lower length scales, grain structure has a more profound impact on the mechanical properties of irradiated materials, which provides information needed to fill in the gap in current understanding of the HT-9 fracture at different length scales.
In this article, we have evaluated the Read-Retry (RR) functionality of the 3-D NAND chip of multilevel-cell (MLC) configuration after total ionization dose (TID) exposure. The RR function is typically offered in the high-density state-of-the-art NAND memory chips to recover data once the default memory read method fails to correct data with error correction codes (ECCs). In this work, we have applied the RR method on the irradiated 3-D NAND chip that was exposed with a Co-60 gamma-ray source for TID up to 50 krad (Si). Based on our experimental evaluation results, we have proposed an algorithm to efficiently implement the RR method to extend the radiation tolerance of the NAND memory chip. Our experimental evaluation shows that the RR method coupled with ECC can ensure data integrity of MLC 3-D NAND for TID up to 50 krad (Si).
Nanocrystalline Al thin films have been strained in situ in a transmission electron microscope using two separate nanomechanical techniques involving a push-to-pull device and a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) device. Deformation-induced grain growth was observed to occur via stress-assisted grain boundary migration with extensive grain growth occurring in the necked region, indicating that the increase in local stress drives the boundary migration. Under applied tensile stresses close to the ultimate tensile strength of 450 MPa for a nanocrystalline Al specimen, measured boundary migration speeds are 0.2 – 0.7 nm s−1 for grains outside necked region and increases to 2.5 nm s−1 for grains within the necked region where the local estimated tensile stresses are elevated to around 630 MPa. By tracking grain boundary motion over time, molecular dynamics simulations showed qualitative agreement in terms of pronounced grain boundary migration with the experimental observations. The combined in situ observation and molecular dynamics simulation results underscore the important role of stress-driven grain growth in plastically deforming nanocrystalline metals, leading to intergranular fracture through predominant grain boundary sliding in regions with large localized deformation.
Kang, Jin G.; Jang, Hyejin; Ma, Jun; Yang, Qun; Hattar, Khalid M.; Diao, Zhu; Yuan, Renliang; Zuo, Jianmin; Sinha, Sanjiv; Cahill, David G.; Braun, Paul V.
While there is no known fundamental lower limit to the thermal conductivity of a material, the lowest thermal conductivities are typically found in amorphous and strongly disordered materials, not highly crystalline materials. Here, we demonstrate a surprising nanostructuring route to ultralow thermal conductivity in a large-unit-cell oxide crystal (Fe3O4) containing close-packed nanoscale pores. The electrical conductivity of this material reduces by a factor of 5 relative to dense v, independent of pore size. In contrast, thermal conductivity has a strong dependence on pore size with a factor of 40 of suppression relative to dense Fe3O4 for 40 nm pores vs a factor of 5 for 500 nm pores. The matrix thermal conductivity of Fe3O4 containing 40 nm pores falls below the predicted minimum thermal conductivity by a factor of 3. Finally, we attribute this to strong acoustic phonon scattering and intrinsically limited contributions to thermal conductivity from optical phonons with small dispersion.
Abstract: Multimodal in-situ experiments are the wave of the future, as this approach will permit multispectral data collection and analysis during real-time nanoscale observation. In contrast, the evolution of technique development in the electron microscopy field has generally trended toward specialization and subsequent bifurcation into more and more niche instruments, creating a challenge for reintegration and backward compatibility for in-situ experiments on state-of-the-art microscopes. We do not believe this to be a requirement in the field; therefore, we propose an adaptive instrument that is designed to allow nearly simultaneous collection of data from aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy (TEM), probe-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy, ultrafast TEM, and dynamic TEM with a flexible in-situ testing chamber, where the entire instrument can be modified as future technologies are developed. The value would be to obtain a holistic understanding of the underlying physics and chemistry of the process-structure–property relationships in materials exposed to controlled extreme environments. Such a tool would permit the ability to explore, in-situ, the active reaction mechanisms in a controlled manner emulating those of real-world applications with nanometer and nanosecond resolution. If such a powerful tool is developed, it has the potential to revolutionize our materials understanding of nanoscale mechanisms and transients. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
Nanocrystalline (NC) metals suffer from an intrinsic thermal instability; their crystalline grains undergo rapid coarsening during processing treatments or under service conditions. Grain boundary (GB) solute segregation has been proposed to mitigate grain growth and thermally stabilize the grain structures of NC metals. However, the role of GB character in solute segregation and thermal stability of NC metals remains poorly understood. Herein, we employ high resolution microscopy techniques, atomistic simulations, and theoretical analysis to investigate and characterize the impact of GB character on segregation behavior and thermal stability in a model NC Pt-Au alloy. High resolution electron microscopy along with X-ray energy dispersive spectroscopy and automated crystallographic orientation mapping is used to obtain spatially correlated Pt crystal orientation, GB misorientation, and Au solute concentration data. Atomistic simulations of polycrystalline Pt-Au systems are used to reveal the plethora of GB segregation profiles as a function of GB misorientation and the corresponding impact on grain growth processes. With the aid of theoretical models of interface segregation, the experimental data for GB concentration profiles are used to extract GB segregation energies, which are then used to elucidate the impact of GB character on solute drag effects. Our results highlight the paramount role of GB character in solute segregation behavior. In broad terms, our approach provides future avenues to employ GB segregation as a microstructure design strategy to develop NC metallic alloys with tailored microstructures. This journal is
In this study, we report on the thermal conductivity of amorphous carbon generated in diamond via nitrogen ion implantation (N 3 + at 16.5 MeV). Transmission electron microscopy techniques demonstrate amorphous band formation about the longitudinal projected range, localized approximately 7 μm beneath the sample surface. While high-frequency time-domain thermoreflectance measurements provide insight into the thermal properties of the near-surface preceding the longitudinal projected range depth, a complimentary technique, steady-state thermoreflectance, is used to probe the thermal conductivity at depths which could not otherwise be resolved. Through measurements with a series of focusing objective lenses for the laser spot size, we find the thermal conductivity of the amorphous region to be approximately 1.4 W m-1 K-1, which is comparable to that measured for amorphous carbon films fabricated through other techniques.
In-situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) provides an avenue to explore time-dependent nanoscale material changes induced by a wide range of environmental conditions that govern material performance and degradation. The In-situ Ion Irradiation TEM (I3TEM) at Sandia National Laboratories is a JEOL 2100 microscope that has been highly modified with an array of hardware and software that makes it particularly well suited to explore fundamental mechanisms that arise from coupled extreme conditions. Here, examples pertaining to multibeam ion irradiation, rapid thermal cycling, and nanomechanical testing on the I3TEM are highlighted, along with prospective advancements in the field of in-situ microscopy.
Islam, Zahabul; Barr, Christopher M.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Haque, Aman
In this study, we explore the interaction of electron wind force (EWF) with defects originating from ion irradiation in-situ inside a transmission electron microscope. Nanocrystalline gold specimens were self-ion irradiated to a dose of 5 × 1015 ions/cm2 (45 displacement per atom) to generate a high density of displacement damage. We also developed a molecular dynamics simulation model to understand the associated atomic scale mechanisms. Both experiments and simulations show that the EWF can impart significant defect mobility even at low temperatures, resulting in the migration and elimination of defects in a few minutes. We propose that the EWF interacts with defects to create highly glissile Shockley partial dislocations, which makes the fast and low temperature defect annihilation possible.
Suri, Pranav K.; Nathaniel, James E.; Li, Nan; Baldwin, Jon K.; Wang, Yongqiang; Hattar, Khalid M.; Taheri, Mitra L.
Gold is a noble metal typically stable as a solid in a face-centered cubic (FCC) structure under ambient conditions; however, under particular circumstances aberrant allotropes have been synthesized. In this work, we document the phase transformation of 25 nm thick nanocrystalline (NC) free-standing gold thin-film via in situ ion irradiation studied using atomic-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Utilizing precession electron diffraction (PED) techniques, crystallographic orientation and the radiation-induced relative strains were measured and furthermore used to determine that a combination of surface and radiation-induced strains lead to an FCC to hexagonal close packed (HCP) crystallographic phase transformation upon a 10 dpa radiation dose of Au4+ ions. Contrary to previous studies, HCP phase in nanostructures of gold was stabilized and did not transform back to FCC due to a combination of size effects and defects imparted by damage cascades.
Guo, Qianying; Gu, Yucong; Barr, Christopher M.; Koenig, Thomas; Hattar, Khalid M.; Li, Lin; Thompson, Gregory B.
The incorporation of nanostructured and amorphous metals into modern applications is reliant on the understanding of deformation and failure modes in constrained conditions. To study this, a 105 nm crystalline Cu/160 nm amorphous Cu45Zr55 (at.%) multilayer structure was fabricated with the two crystalline layers sputter deposited between the top-middle-bottom amorphous layers and prepared to electron transparency. The multilayer was then in situ indented either under a single load to a depth of ~ 100 nm (max load of ~ 100 μN) or held at 20 μN and then repeatedly indented with an additional 5 μN up to 20,000 cycles in a transmission electron microscope to compare the deformation responses in the nanolaminate. For the single indentation test, the multilayer showed serrated load-displacement behavior upon initial indentation inductive of shear banding. At an indentation depth of ~ 32 nm, the multilayer exhibited perfect plastic behavior and no strain hardening. Both indented and fatigue-indented films revealed diffraction contrast changes with deformation. Subsequent Automated Crystal Orientation Mapping (ACOM) measurements confirmed and quantified global texture changes in the crystalline layers with specifically identified grains revealing rotation. Using a finite element model, the in-plane displacement vectors under the indent mapped conditions where ACOM determined grain rotation was observed, indicating the stress flow induced grain rotation. The single indented Cu layers also exhibited evidence of deformation induced grain growth, which was not evident in the fatigue-indented Cu based multilayer. Finally, the single indented multilayer retained a significant plastic crater in the upper most amorphous layer that directly contacted the indenter; a negligible crater impression in the same region was observed in the fatigued tested multilayer. These differences are explained by the different loading methods, applied load, and deformation mechanisms experienced in the multilayers.
Understanding microstructural and strain evolutions induced by noble gas production in the nuclear fuel matrix or plasma-facing materials is crucial for designing next generation nuclear reactors, as they are responsible for volumetric swelling and catastrophic failure. We describe a multimodal approach combining synchrotron-based nanoscale X-ray imaging techniques with atomic-scale electron microscopy techniques for mapping chemical composition, morphology and lattice distortion in a single crystal W induced by Kr irradiation. We report that Kr-irradiated single crystal W undergoes surface deformation, forming Kr containing cavities. Furthermore, positive strain fields are observed in Kr-irradiated regions, which lead to compression of underlying W matrix.
Spurgeon, Steven R.; Ophus, Colin; Jones, Lewys; Kalinin, Sergei V.; Olszta, Matthew J.; Dunin-Borkowski, Rafal E.; Salmon, Norman; Hattar, Khalid M.; Yang, Wei-Chang D.; Sharma, Renu; Du, Yingge; Chiaramonti, Ann; Zheng, Haimei; Buck, Edgar C.; Kovarik, Libor; Penn, R.L.; Li, Dongsheng; Zhang, Xin; Murayama, Mitsuhiro; Taheri, Mitra L.
The rapidly evolving field of electron microscopy touches nearly every aspect of mod- ern life, underpinning impactful materials discoveries in applications such as quan- tum information science, energy, and medicine. As the field enters a new decade, a paradigm has begun to emerge in which the convergence of advanced instrumenta- tion, robust in-situ platforms, and data-driven experimentation will help researchers distill observations of ever more complex systems into meaningful physical properties and mechanisms. Here we present the findings from the first in a series of work- shops gathering together scientists and technologists across academia, government laboratories, and industry, with the goal to develop a critical roadmap for next- generation transmission electron microscopy (NexTEM). We provide a perspective on the present and emerging state-of-the-art, highlighting progress and the crucial developments still needed to realize the materials of tomorrow.
In this article, we studied the total ionization dose (TID) effects on the multilevel-cell (MLC) 3-D NAND flash memory using Co-60 gamma radiation. We found a significant page-to-page bit error variation within a physical memory block of the irradiated memory chip. Our analysis showed that the origin of the bit error variation is the unique vertical layer-dependent TID response of the 3-D NAND. We found that the memory pages located at the upper and lower layers of the 3-D stack show higher fails compared to the middle-layer pages of a given memory block. We confirmed our findings by comparing radiation response of four different chips of the same specification. In addition, we compared the TID response of the MLC 3-D NAND with that of the 2-D NAND chip, which showed less page-to-page variation in bit error within a given memory block. We discuss the possible application of our findings for the radiation-tolerant smart memory controller design.
Grosso, Robson L.; Vikrant, K.S.N.; Feng, Lin; Muccillo, Eliana N.S.; Muche, Dereck N.F.; Jawaharram, Gowtham S.; Barr, Christopher M.; Monterrosa, Anthony M.; Castro, Ricardo H.R.; Garcia, R.E.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Dillon, Shen J.
This work uses a combination of stress dependent single grain boundary Coble creep and zero-creep experiments to measure interfacial energies, along with grain boundary point defect formation and migration volumes in cubic ZrO2. These data, along with interfacial diffusivities measured in a companion paper are then applied to analyzing two-particle sintering. The analysis presented here indicates that the large activation volume, primarily derives from a large migration volume and suggests that the grain boundary rate limiting defects are delocalized, possibly due to electrostatic interactions between charge compensating defects. The discrete nature of the sintering and creep process observed in the small-scale experiments supports the hypothesis that grain boundary dislocations serve as sources and sinks for grain boundary point defects and facilitate strain during sintering and Coble creep. Model two-particle sintering experiments demonstrate that initial-stage densification follows interface reaction rate-limited kinetics.
Vikrant, K.S.N.; Grosso, Robson L.; Feng, Lin; Muccillo, Eliana N.S.; Muche, Dereck N.F.; Jawaharram, Gowtham S.; Barr, Christopher M.; Monterrosa, Anthony M.; Castro, Ricardo H.R.; Garcia, R.E.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Dillon, Shen J.
This study demonstrates novel in situ transmission electron microscopy-based microscale single grain boundary Coble creep experiments used to grow nanowires through a solid-state process in cubic ZrO2 between ≈ 1200 °C and ≈ 2100 °C. Experiments indicate Coble creep drives the formation of nanowires from asperity contacts during tensile displacement, which is confirmed by phase field simulations. The experiments also facilitate efficient measurement of grain boundary diffusivity and surface diffusivity. 10 mol% Sc2O3 doped ZrO2 is found to have a cation grain boundary diffusivity of $D_{gb} = (0.056 ± 0.05)exp (\frac{-380,000±41,000}{RT})m^2 s^{-1}$, and $D_s = (0.10 ± 0.27)exp(\frac{-380,000 ± 28,000}{RT}) m^2 s^{-1}$.
This work explores the development of a heterogeneous nanostructured material through leveraging abnormal recrystallization, which is a prominent phenomenon in coarse-grained Ni-based superalloys. Through synthesis of a sputtered Inconel 725 film with a heterogeneous distribution of stored energy and subsequent aging treatments at 730°C, a unique combination of grain sizes and morphologies was observed throughout the thickness of the material. Three distinct domains are formed in the aged microstructure, where abnormally large grains are observed in-between a nanocrystalline and a nanotwinned region. In order to investigate the transitions towards a heterogeneous structure, crystallographic orientation and elemental mapping at interval aging times up to 8 h revealed the microstructural evolution and precipitation behavior. From the experimental observations and the detailed analysis of this study, the current methodology can be utilized to further expand the design space of current heterogeneous nanostructured materials.
Radiation damage can cause significantly more surface damage in metallic nanostructures than bulk materials. Structural changes from displacement damage compromise the performance of nanostructures in radiation environments such as nuclear reactors and outer space, or used in radiation therapy for biomedical treatments. As such, it is important to develop strategies to prevent this from occurring if nanostructures are to be incorporated into these applications. In this work, in situ transmission electron microscope ion irradiation was used to investigate whether a metallic glass (MG) coating mitigates sputtering and morphological changes in metallic nanostructures. Dislocation-free Au nanocubes and Au nanocubes coated with a Ni–B MG were bombarded with 2.8 MeV Au4+ ions. The formation of internal defects in bare Au nanocubes was observed at a fluence of 7.5 × 1011 ions/cm2 (0.008 dpa), and morphological changes such as surface roughening, rounding of corners, and formation of nanofilaments began at 4 × 1012 ions/cm2 (0.04 dpa). In contrast, the Ni–B MG-coated Au nanocubes (Au@NiB) showed minimal morphological changes at a fluence of 1.9 × 1013 ions/cm2 (0.2 dpa). Finally, the MG coating maintains its amorphous nature under all irradiation conditions investigated.
Ali, Amir; Kim, Hyun G.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Briggs, Samuel; Jun Park, Dong; Hwan Park, Jung; Lee, Youho
The concept of coating the currently used nuclear fuel cladding (zirconium-based alloy, typically Zircaloy-4 or Zirc-4) with an oxidation preventive layer is a progressing Accident tolerant Fuel (ATF) candidate alloys. The coated Zirc-4-based alloys could be a solution to suppress undesirable fast reaction kinetics with high-temperature steam. Zirc-4 has been the most preferred cladding material in pressurized water reactors (PWRs). Chromium (Cr) based alloys as a coating material provides excellent corrosion protection and good strength and wear resistance. This paper presents the surface wettability measurements and pool boiling Critical Heat Flux (CHF) for Cr-coated Zirc-4 claddings pre- and post-exposure to an ion irradiation environment. The wettability measurements, including static contact angle (contact angle, θ) and average surface roughness (surface roughness, Ra), are introduced for samples of different coating thicknesses (5–30 μm thick). The coatings fabricated by the cold spray of Cr-Al particles to 10 mm × 10 mm × 1.95 mm Zirc-4 substrates. Post fabrication, a Pilgering (cold rolling) process, was applied to finalize the coating thickness and resulted in a significant reduction in surface roughness of initially fabricated rough surfaces. The process produced three distinguished samples 5-μm unpolished (as machined), 5-μm, and 30-μm polished (cold rolled). The measurements are presented for the three surfaces and bare Zirc-4 as a baseline surface. The contact angle analyses were implemented in theoretical models from the literature to predict pool boiling CHF. Pool boiling experiments were conducted to measure the pool boiling CHF values and compare them to the predicted values. Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) images and Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (EDS) analysis was performed to characterize the surfaces for better understanding and interpreting the results. The SEM images showed localized surface damage due to ion irradiation. No recognized change in the measured surface roughness due to ion irradiation. The contact angles of irradiated Cr-coated surfaces are consistently higher (10°) than pre-irradiated surfaces. Decreasing the Cr-coating layer thickness resulted in lower contact angle pre- and post- ion irradiation. The predicted pool boiling CHF using the Kandlikar model is in good agreement with the experimentally measured CHF values within ±12% for all samples.
Despite its scarcity in terrestrial life, helium effects on microstructure evolution and thermo-mechanical properties can have a significant impact on the operation and lifetime of applications, including: advanced structural steels in fast fission reactors, plasma facing and structural materials in fusion devices, spallation neutron target designs, energetic alpha emissions in actinides, helium precipitation in tritium-containing materials, and nuclear waste materials. The small size of a helium atom combined with its near insolubility in almost every solid makes the helium–solid interaction extremely complex over multiple length and time scales. This Special Issue, “Radiation Damage in Materials—Helium Effects”, contains review articles and full-length papers on new irradiation material research activities and novel material ideas using experimental and/or modeling approaches. These studies elucidate the interactions of helium with various extreme environments and tailored nanostructures, as well as their impact on microstructural evolution and material properties.
Noble gases are generated within solids in nuclear environments and coalesce to form gas stabilized voids or cavities. Ion implantation has become a prevalent technique for probing how gas accumulation affects microstructural and mechanical properties. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) allows measurement of cavity density, size, and spatial distributions post-implantation. While post-implantation microstructural information is valuable for determining the physical origins of mechanical property degradation in these materials, dynamic microstructural changes can only be determined by in situ experimentation techniques. We present in situ TEM experiments performed on Pd, a model face-centered cubic metal that reveals real-time cavity evolution dynamics. Observations of cavity nucleation and evolution under extreme environments are discussed.
The high-cycle fatigue life of nanocrystalline and ultrafine-grained Ni-Fe was examined for five distinct grain sizes ranging from approximately 50–600 nm. The fatigue properties were strongly dependent on grain size, with the endurance limit changing by a factor of 4 over this narrow range of grain size. The dataset suggests a breakdown in fatigue improvement for the smallest grain sizes <100 nm, likely associated with a transition to grain coarsening as a dominant rate-limiting mechanism. The dataset also is used to explore fatigue prediction from monotonic tensile properties, suggesting that a characteristic flow strength is more meaningful than the widely-utilized ultimate tensile strength.
Practical applications of nanocrystalline metallic thin films are often limited by instabilities. In addition to grain growth, the thin film itself can become unstable and collapse into islands through solid-state dewetting. Selective alloying can improve nanocrystalline stability, but the impact of this approach on dewetting is not clear. In this study, two alloys that exhibit nanocrystalline thermal stability as ball milled powders are evaluated as thin films. While both alloys demonstrated dewetting behavior following annealing, the severity decreased in more dilute compositions. Ultimately, a balance may be struck between nanocrystalline stability and thin film structural stability by tuning dopant concentration.
Nanocrystalline metals are promising radiation tolerant materials due to their large interfacial volume fraction, but irradiation-induced grain growth can eventually degrade any improvement in radiation tolerance. Therefore, methods to limit grain growth and simultaneously improve the radiation tolerance of nanocrystalline metals are needed. Amorphous intergranular films are unique grain boundary structures that are predicted to have improved sink efficiencies due to their increased thickness and amorphous structure, while also improving grain size stability. In this study, ball milled nanocrystalline Cu-Zr alloys are heat treated to either have only ordered grain boundaries or to contain amorphous intergranular films distributed within the grain boundary network, and are then subjected to in situ transmission electron microscopy irradiation and ex situ irradiation. Differences in defect density and grain growth due to grain boundary complexion type are then investigated. When amorphous intergranular films are incorporated within the material, fewer and smaller defect clusters are observed while grain growth is also limited, leading to nanocrystalline alloys with improved radiation tolerance.
Grosso, Robson L.; Muccillo, Eliana N.S.; Muche, Dereck N.F.; Jawaharram, Gowtham S.; Barr, Christopher M.; Monterrosa, Anthony M.; Castro, Ricardo H.R.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Dillon, Shen J.
This work demonstrates a novel approach to ultrahigherature mechanical testing using a combination of in situ nanomechanical testing and localized laser heating. The methodology is applied to characterizing and testing initially nanograined 10 mol % Sc2O3-stabilized ZrO2 up to its melting temperature. The results suggest that the lowerature strength of nanograined, d < 50 nm, oxides is not influenced by creep. Tensile fracture of ZrO2 bicrystals produce a weakerature dependence suggesting that grain boundary energy dominates brittle fracture of grain boundaries even at high homologous temperatures; for example, T = 2050 °C or T ≈ 77% Tmelt. The maximum temperature for mechanical testing in this work is primarily limited by the instability of the sample, due to evaporation or melting, enabling a host of new opportunities for testing materials in the ultrahigherature regime.
Scott, Ethan A.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Braun, Jeffrey L.; Rost, Christina M.; Gaskins, John T.; Bai, Tingyu; Wang, Yekan; Ganski, Claire; Goorsky, Mark; Hopkins, Patrick E.
Despite the exceptional thermal and mechanical functionalities of diamond, its superlative properties are highly subject to the presence of point defects, dislocations, and interfaces. In this study, polycrystalline diamond is ion implanted with C3+, N3+, and O3+ ions at an energy of 16.5 MeV, producing an amorphous layer at the projected range and a damaged crystalline region between the surface and amorphous layer. Using time-domain thermoreflectance in combination with thermal penetration depth calculations based upon the multilayer heat diffusion equation, it is determined that reductions in the thermal conductivity can span nearly two orders of magnitude while still maintaining a polycrystalline structure within the regions thermally probed. Dynamical diffraction simulations of high-resolution x-ray diffraction measurements demonstrate the formation of a strained layer localized at the end of range, with much lower levels of strain near the surface. Furthermore, within the polycrystalline region above the amorphous layer, the average number of displacements-per-atom from the ion irradiation is found to be <1%, with mass impurity concentrations much less than 1%. These low defect concentrations within the thermally probed region demonstrate the remarkably large impact that dilute levels of defects from the ion implantation can have on the thermal conductivity of diamond.
Li, Qiang; Xue, Sichuang; Price, Patrick M.; Sun, Xing; Ding, Jie; Shang, Zhongxia; Fan, Zhe; Wang, Han; Zhang, Yifan; Chen, Youxing; Wang, Haiyan; Hattar, Khalid M.; Zhang, Xinghang
High-density growth nanotwins enable high-strength and good ductility in metallic materials. However, twinning propensity is greatly reduced in metals with high stacking fault energy. In this study, we adopted a hybrid technique coupled with template-directed heteroepitaxial growth method to fabricate single-crystal-like, nanotwinned (nt) Ni. The nt Ni primarily contains hierarchical twin structures that consist of coherent and incoherent twin boundary segments with few conventional grain boundaries. In situ compression studies show the nt Ni has a high flow strength of ~2 GPa and good deformability. Moreover, the nt Ni has superb corrosion behavior due to the unique twin structure in comparison to coarse grained and nanocrystalline counterparts. The hybrid technique opens the door for the fabrication of a wide variety of single-crystal-like nt metals with unique mechanical and chemical properties.
Mitigating corrosion remains a daunting challenge due to localized, nanoscale corrosion events that are poorly understood but are known to cause unpredictable variations in material longevity. Here, the most recent advances in liquid-cell transmission electron microscopy were employed to capture the advent of localized aqueous corrosion in carbon steel at the nanoscale and in real time. Localized corrosion initiated at a triple junction formed by a solitary cementite grain and two ferrite grains and then continued at the electrochemically-active boundary between these two phases. With this analysis, we identified facetted pitting at the phase boundary, uniform corrosion rates from the steel surface, and data that suggest that a re-initiating galvanic corrosion mechanism is possible in this environment. These observations represent an important step toward atomically defining nanoscale corrosion mechanisms, enabling the informed development of next-generation inhibition technologies and the improvement of corrosion predictive models.
Knowing when, why, and how materials evolve, degrade, or fail in radiation environments is pivotal to a wide range of fields from semiconductor processing to advanced nuclear reactor design. A variety of methods, including optical and electron microscopy, mechanical testing, and thermal techniques, have been used in the past to successfully monitor the microstructural and property evolution of materials exposed to extreme radiation environments. Acoustic techniques have also been used in the past for this purpose, although most methodologies have not achieved widespread adoption. However, with an increasing desire to understand microstructure and property evolution in situ, acoustic methods provide a promising pathway to uncover information not accessible to more traditional characterization techniques. This work highlights how two different classes of acoustic techniques may be used to monitor material evolution during in situ ion beam irradiation. The passive listening technique of acoustic emission is demonstrated on two model systems, quartz and palladium, and shown to be a useful tool in identifying the onset of damage events such as microcracking. An active acoustic technique in the form of transient grating spectroscopy is used to indirectly monitor the formation of small defect clusters in copper irradiated with self-ions at high temperature through the evolution of surface acoustic wave speeds. Here, these studies together demonstrate the large potential for using acoustic techniques as in situ diagnostics. Such tools could be used to optimize ion beam processing techniques or identify modes and kinetics of materials degradation in extreme radiation environments.
Islam, Zahabul; Paoletta, Angela L.; Monterrosa, Anthony M.; Schuler, Jennifer D.; Rupert, Timothy J.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Glavin, Nicholas; Haque, Aman
We investigate the effects of ion irradiation on AlGaN/GaN high electron mobility electron transistors using in-situ transmission electron microscopy. The experiments are performed inside the microscope to visualize the defects, microstructure and interfaces of ion irradiated transistors during operation and failure. Experimental results indicate that heavy ions such as Au4+ can create a significant number of defects such as vacancies, interstitials and dislocations in the device layer. It is hypothesized that these defects act as charge traps in the device layer and the resulting charge accumulation lowers the breakdown voltage. Sequential energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy mapping allows us to track individual chemical elements during the experiment, and the results suggest that the electrical degradation in the device layer may originate from oxygen and nitrogen vacancies.
The influence of He ion radiation on GaAs thermal conductivity was investigated using TDTR and the PGM. We found that damage in the shallow defect only regions of the radiation profile scattering phonons with a frequency to the fourth dependence due to randomly distributed Frankel pairs. Damage near the end of range however, scatters phonons with a second order frequency dependence due to the cascading defects caused by the rapid radiation energy loss at the end of range resulting in defect clusters. Using the PGM and experimental thermal conductivity trends it was then possible to estimate the defect recombination rate and size of defect clusters. The methodology developed here results in a powerful tool for interrogating radiation damage in semiconductors.
Jawaharram, Gowtham S.; Barr, Christopherm; Monterrosa, Anthonym; Hattar, Khalid M.; Averback, Robert S.; Dillon, Shen J.
Irradiation induced creep (IIC) compliance in NiCoFeCrMn high entropy alloys is measured as a function of grain size (30 < x < 80 nm) and temperature (23–500 °C). For 2.6 MeV Ag3+ irradiation at a dose rate of 1.5×10–3 dpa–1s–1 the transition from the recombination to sink limited regimes occurs at ~ 100 °C. In the sink-limited regime, the IIC compliance scales inversely with grain size, consistent with a recently proposed model for grain boundary IIC. The thermal creep rate is also measured; it does not become comparable to the IIC rate, however, until ~ 650 °C. Here, the results are discussed in context of defect kinetics in irradiated HEA systems.
The effects of irradiation on 3C-silicon carbide (SiC) and amorphous SiC (a-SiC) are investigated using both in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and complementary molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The single ion strikes identified in the in situ TEM irradiation experiments, utilizing a 1.7 MeV Au3+ ion beam with nanosecond resolution, are contrasted to MD simulation results of the defect cascades produced by 10-100 keV Si primary knock-on atoms (PKAs). The MD simulations also investigated defect structures that could possibly be responsible for the observed strain fields produced by single ion strikes in the TEM ion beam irradiation experiments. Both MD simulations and in situ TEM experiments show evidence of radiation damage in 3C-SiC but none in a-SiC. Selected area electron diffraction patterns, based on the results of MD simulations and in situ TEM irradiation experiments, show no evidence of structural changes in either 3C-SiC or a-SiC.
Reed, B.W.; Moghadam, A.A.; Bloom, R.S.; Park, S.T.; Monterrosa, A.M.; Price, Patrick M.; Barr, C.M.; Briggs, S.A.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Mckeown, J.T.; Masiel, D.J.
We present kilohertz-scale video capture rates in a transmission electron microscope, using a camera normally limited to hertz-scale acquisition. An electrostatic deflector rasters a discrete array of images over a large camera, decoupling the acquisition time per subframe from the camera readout time. Total-variation regularization allows features in overlapping subframes to be correctly placed in each frame. Moreover, the system can be operated in a compressive-sensing video mode, whereby the deflections are performed in a known pseudorandom sequence. Compressive sensing in effect performs data compression before the readout, such that the video resulting from the reconstruction can have substantially more total pixels than that were read from the camera. This allows, for example, 100 frames of video to be encoded and reconstructed using only 15 captured subframes in a single camera exposure. We demonstrate experimental tests including laser-driven melting/dewetting, sintering, and grain coarsening of nanostructured gold, with reconstructed video rates up to 10 kHz. The results exemplify the power of the technique by showing that it can be used to study the fundamentally different temporal behavior for the three different physical processes. Both sintering and coarsening exhibited self-limiting behavior, whereby the process essentially stopped even while the heating laser continued to strike the material. We attribute this to changes in laser absorption and to processes inherent to thin-film coarsening. In contrast, the dewetting proceeded at a relatively uniform rate after an initial incubation time consistent with the establishment of a steady-state temperature profile.
Yan, Xueliang; Wang, Fei; Hattar, Khalid M.; Nastasi, Michael; Cui, Bai
A novel amorphous silicon oxycarbide dispersion-strengthened (SiOC-DS) austenitic steel has been fabricated via a powder metallurgy process. The microstructure of dispersion particles has been characterized by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), revealing that amorphous SiOC nanoparticles with an average particle size of 30 nm were homogeneously distributed in the austenite grains with a sub-micrometer grain size. The high strength and hardness of SiOC-DS may be attributed to grain boundary strengthening, as well as dispersion strengthening via dislocation–particle interactions that were revealed by TEM investigations. In situ ion irradiation experiments showed that amorphous SiOC particles were stable after irradiation of 3.7 dpa, and the SiOC/steel interface can be an effective sink for the annihilation of irradiation defects. The excellent mechanical and irradiation properties of SiOC-DS austenitic steel make it a promising structural material for nuclear applications.
The ability of nanoporous metals to avoid accumulation of damage under ion beam irradiation has been the focus of several studies in recent years. The width of the interconnected ligaments forming the network structure typically is on the order of tens of nanometers. In such confined volumes with high amounts of surface area, the accumulation of damage (defects such as stacking-fault tetrahedra and dislocation loops) can be mitigated via migration and annihilation of these defects at the free surfaces. In this work, in situ characterization of radiation damage in nanoporous gold (np-Au) was performed in the transmission electron microscope. Several samples with varying average ligament size were subjected to gold ion beams having three different energies (10 MeV, 1.7 MeV and 46 keV). The inherent radiation tolerance of np-Au was directly observed in real time, for all ion beam conditions, and the degree of ion-induced damage accumulation in np-Au ligaments is discussed here.
Nanocrystalline metals typically have high fatigue strengths but low resistance to crack propagation. Amorphous intergranular films are disordered grain boundary complexions that have been shown to delay crack nucleation and slow crack propagation during monotonic loading by diffusing grain boundary strain concentrations, which suggests they may also be beneficial for fatigue properties. To probe this hypothesis, in situ transmission electron microscopy fatigue cycling is performed on Cu-1 at.% Zr thin films thermally treated to have either only ordered grain boundaries or amorphous intergranular films. The sample with only ordered grain boundaries experienced grain coarsening at crack initiation followed by unsteady crack propagation and extensive nanocracking, whereas the sample containing amorphous intergranular films had no grain coarsening at crack initiation followed by steady crack propagation and distributed plastic activity. Microstructural design for control of these behaviors through simple thermal treatments can allow for the improvement of nanocrystalline metal fatigue toughness.
Getto, E.; B Baker A, B.T.; Briggs, S.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Knipling, K.
The effect of ion irradiation on the microstructure of oxide dispersion strengthened (ODS) MA956 steel, before and after friction stir welding (FSW), was studied. Both the base material (BM) and welded stir zone (SZ) were irradiated with 5 MeV Fe ++ ions at 450 °C up to 25 displacements per atom (dpa). Characterization was performed using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and atom probe tomography (APT), with particular emphasis on the Y–Al–O dispersoid characteristics and dislocation microstructures. After irradiation, the dispersoids in the BM increased in diameter and decreased in number density, which was explained by an Ostwald ripening mechanism. FSW caused significant coarsening and agglomeration of the dispersoids. After irradiation, both the diameter and number density of the SZ dispersoids increased, which was explained by an irradiation-enhanced diffusion mechanism. Dislocation loop and network behavior was also characterized and large dislocation loops of ≈20 nm diameter formed by 1 dpa in both the BM and SZ samples, whereas the network density remained nearly constant with irradiation.
Jiang, Weilin; Conroy, Michele A.; Kruska, Karen; Olszta, Matthew J.; Droubay, Timothy C.; Schwantes, Jon M.; Taylor, Caitlin A.; Price, Patrick M.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Devanathan, Ram
Energy and cost efficient synthesis pathways are important for the production, processing, and recycling of rare earth metals necessary for a range of advanced energy and environmental applications. In this work, we present results of successful in situ liquid cell transmission electron microscopy production and imaging of rare earth element nanostructure synthesis, from aqueous salt solutions, via radiolysis due to exposure to a 200 keV electron beam. Nucleation, growth, and crystallization processes for nanostructures formed in yttrium(iii) nitrate hydrate (Y(NO3)3·4H2O), europium(iii) chloride hydrate (EuCl3·6H2O), and lanthanum(iii) chloride hydrate (LaCl3·7H2O) solutions are discussed. In situ electron diffraction analysis in a closed microfluidic configuration indicated that rare earth metal, salt, and metal oxide structures were synthesized. Real-time imaging of nanostructure formation was compared in closed cell and flow cell configurations. Notably, this work also includes the first known collection of automated crystal orientation mapping data through liquid using a microfluidic transmission electron microscope stage, which permits the deconvolution of amorphous and crystalline features (orientation and interfaces) inside the resulting nanostructures.
A facility for continuously monitoring the thermal and elastic performance of materials under exposure to ion beam irradiation has been designed and commissioned. By coupling an all-optical, non-contact, non-destructive measurement technique known as transient grating spectroscopy (TGS) to a 6 MV tandem ion accelerator, bulk material properties may be measured at high fidelity as a function of irradiation exposure and temperature. Ion beam energies and optical parameters may be tuned to ensure that only the properties of the ion-implanted surface layer are interrogated. This facility provides complementary capabilities to the set of facilities worldwide which have the ability to study the evolution of microstructure in situ during radiation exposure, but lack the ability to measure bulk-like properties. Here, the measurement physics of TGS, design of the experimental facility, and initial results using both light and heavy ion exposures are described. Lastly, several short- and long-term upgrades are discussed which will further increase the capabilities of this diagnostic.
Nanocrystalline metals offer significant improvements in structural performance over conventional alloys. However, their performance is limited by grain boundary instability and limited ductility. Solute segregation has been proposed as a stabilization mechanism, however the solute atoms can embrittle grain boundaries and further degrade the toughness. In the present study, we confirm the embrittling effect of solute segregation in Pt-Au alloys. However, more importantly, we show that inhomogeneous chemical segregation to the grain boundary can lead to a new toughening mechanism termed compositional crack arrest. Energy dissipation is facilitated by the formation of nanocrack networks formed when cracks arrested at regions of the grain boundaries that were starved in the embrittling element. This mechanism, in concert with triple junction crack arrest, provides pathways to optimize both thermal stability and energy dissipation. A combination of in situ tensile deformation experiments and molecular dynamics simulations elucidate both the embrittling and toughening processes that can occur as a function of solute content.
Islam, Zahabul; Wang, Baoming; Hattar, Khalid M.; Gao, Huajian; Haque, Aman
Strength and ductility are mutually exclusive in metallic materials. To break this relationship, we start with nanocrystalline Zirconium with very high strength and low ductility. We then ion irradiate the specimens to introduce vacancies, which promote diffusional plasticity without reducing strength. Mechanical tests inside the Transmission Electron Microscope reveal about 300% increase in plastic strain after self ion-irradiation. Molecular dynamics simulation showed that 4.3% increase in vacancies near the grain boundaries can result in about 60% increase in plastic strain. Both experimental and computational results support our hypothesis that vacancies may enhance plasticity through higher atomic diffusivity at the grain boundaries.
Hinks, J.A.; Hibberd, F.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Ilinov, A.; Bufford, Daniel C.; Djurabekova, F.; Greaves, G.; Kuronen, A.; Donnelly, S.E.; Nordlund, K.
Nanostructures may be exposed to irradiation during their manufacture, their engineering and whilst in-service. The consequences of such bombardment can be vastly different from those seen in the bulk. In this paper, we combine transmission electron microscopy with in situ ion irradiation with complementary computer modelling techniques to explore the physics governing the effects of 1.7 MeV Au ions on gold nanorods. Phenomena surrounding the sputtering and associated morphological changes caused by the ion irradiation have been explored. In both the experiments and the simulations, large variations in the sputter yields from individual nanorods were observed. These sputter yields have been shown to correlate with the strength of channelling directions close to the direction in which the ion beam was incident. Craters decorated by ejecta blankets were found to form due to cluster emission thus explaining the high sputter yields.
Nanocrystalline metals offer significant improvements in structural performance over conventional alloys. However, their performance is limited by grain boundary instability and limited ductility. Solute segregation has been proposed as a stabilization mechanism, however the solute atoms can embrittle grain boundaries and further degrade the toughness. In the present study, we confirm the embrittling effect of solute segregation in Pt–Au alloys. However, more importantly, we show that inhomogeneous chemical segregation to the grain boundary can lead to a new toughening mechanism termed compositional crack arrest. Energy dissipation is facilitated by the formation of nanocrack networks formed when cracks arrested at regions of the grain boundaries that were starved in the embrittling element. This mechanism, in concert with triple junction crack arrest, provides pathways to optimize both thermal stability and energy dissipation. A combination of in situ tensile deformation experiments and molecular dynamics simulations elucidate both the embrittling and toughening processes that can occur as a function of solute content.
The National Nuclear Security Administration's Tritium Sustainment Program is responsible for the design, development, demonstration, testing, analysis, and characterization of tritium-producing burnable absorber rods (TPBARs) and their components, in addition to producing tritium for the nation's strategic stockpile. The FY18 call for proposals included the specific basic science research topic, "Demonstration and evaluation of advanced characterization methods, particularly for quantifying the concentration of light isotopes (1H, 2H, and 4He, 6Li, and 7Li) in metal or ceramic matrices". A project IWO-389859 was awarded to the Ion Beam Lab (IBL) at Sandia-NM in FY18. This reports the success we had in developing and demonstrating such a method: 42 MeV Si+ 7 from the IBL' s Tandem was used to recoil these light isotopes into special detectors that separated all these isotopes by simultaneously measuring the energy and stopping power of these reoils. This technique, called Heavy Ion - Elastic Recoil Detection or HI-ERD, accurately measured the enriched 6 Li/Li-total of 0.246 +- 0.016, compared to the known value of 0.239. The isotopes 1H, 2H, 4He, 6Li and 7Li were also measured. (page intentionally left blank)