MD simulation of high energy cascades and damage accumulation in beta-SiC in inertial fusion conditions

Citation
Jm. Perlado et al., MD simulation of high energy cascades and damage accumulation in beta-SiC in inertial fusion conditions, FUSION TECH, 34(3), 1998, pp. 840-847
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Nuclear Emgineering
Journal title
FUSION TECHNOLOGY
ISSN journal
07481896 → ACNP
Volume
34
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Part
2
Pages
840 - 847
Database
ISI
SICI code
0748-1896(199811)34:3<840:MSOHEC>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
An extreme condition in Inertial Fusion Energy (IFE) reactors will be the v ery high neutron dose rate from each burst of high gain targets. The effect of pulsed damage on the structural materials of the reactor chamber needs to be examined and its actual importance carefully assessed. A first calculation of neutron spectra and intensities in one burst of dire ctly driven target (pR approximate to 4 g.cm(-2), 3 Hz) yields, for a appro ximate to 500 MJ shot of neutrons, a rate of approximate to 7 x 10(20) n.s( -1), the total time of deposition bn the chamber walls being of approximate to 1 mu s. This corresponds to a collisional parameter of 0.1 dpa/burst (i n Fe), which gives an average damage rate of approximate to 3.8 dpa/year. T he evolution in time of collisional damage is also presented. Our work focuses on cubic silicon carbide (beta-SiC) as a base for the next generation of low-activation materials. The Molecular Dynamics (MD) code M DCASK allows the description of the interaction of high energy recoils with the SiC lattice, by using a modification of the many-body semi-empirical i nter-atomic Tersoff potential, merged with a repulsive binary potential obt ained from ab initio calculations. A new assessment of previous works is pr esented. Preliminary values of threshold displacement energies are given an d the observation of recombination barriers is reported. As a first step fo r a future intra- and inter-pulse damage study, by means of Kinetic Monte-C arlo (KMC) diffusion calculations, 3 and 5 keV Si-recoil-induced cascade si mulations are analysed, discussing excitation and defects' characteristics in both sub-lattices: differences with respect to earlier works are found. Finally, the simulations of accumulations of up to 25 recoils of 500 eV and 1 keV are examined, in order to get a deeper insight into the damage state produced inside the material by intensive and prolonged irradiation in the absence of self-annealing.