April 1, 2004
Journal Article

Surprisingly Large Generation and Retention of Helium and Hydrogen in Pure Nickel Irradiated at High Temperatures and High Neutron Exposures

Abstract

Hydrogen and helium measurements in pure nickel irradiated to 100 dpa in HFIR at temperatures between 300 and 600C show higher gas concentrations than predicted from fast-neutron reations and the two-step 58Ni(n,g)59Ni(n,p and n,a) reactions. This addional gas production suggests previously unidentified nuclear sources of helium and possibly hydrogen that assert themselves at very high neutron exposure. The elevated hydrogen measurements are especially surprising since it is generally accepted that hydrogen is very mobile in nickel at elevated temperatures and therefore is easily lost, never reaching large concentrations. However, it appears that relatively large hydrogen concentrations can be reached and retained for many years after irradiation at reactor-relevant temperatures. These new effects may have a significant impact on the performance of nickel-bearing alloys at high neutron fluences in both fission and fusion reactor irradiations.

Revised: December 29, 2005 | Published: April 1, 2004

Citation

Greenwood L.R., F.A. Garner, B.M. Oliver, M.L. Grossbeck, and W.G. Wolfer. 2004. Surprisingly Large Generation and Retention of Helium and Hydrogen in Pure Nickel Irradiated at High Temperatures and High Neutron Exposures. Journal of ASTM International. JAI 1, no. 4:529-539. PNNL-SA-38372. doi:10.1520/JAI11365