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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2011
This is a copy of the slides presented at the meeting but not formally written up for the volume.
It is well-known that impurities affect the migration of intrinsic point defects in metals. For instance, carbon is a common impurity in Fe that significantly retards diffusion of vacancies. Under fusion irradiation conditions, high levels of He are produced by transmutation reactions. This element strongly interacts with vacancies produced during irradiation and agglomerate into stable He-vacancy clusters that can deteriorate the mechanical properties of the material. A physically-based model accounting for the interactions between He, point defects (interstitials and vacancies) and trapping impurities is therefore necessary to understand and predict damage evolution in Fe.We have used a multi-scale approach to predict the evolution of He in the presence of impurities in irradiated Fe. Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations were performed to investigate the migration mechanisms and to determine the activation energies of the different atomistic processes. The influence of impurities - such as carbon - on the binding energies of small He-vacancy clusters was also studied. Using the information obtained by DFT a physically-based model was developed and implemented in a kinetic Monte Carlo (kMC) code to follow the evolution of He in Fe. In addition, a model based on the rate theory (RT) was developed in order to achieve larger simulation times and volumes. Results obtained with this model, which is based on a mean field approximation are compared to those obtained with kMC. Using this multiscale approach, the simulation results are used to interpret the different stages of thermal He desorption experiments and to determine the predominant migration mechanism. The influence of impurities which affect the diffusion of point defects or modify the binding energies of He-vacancy type clusters is also studied.