High dose neutron irradiation damage in alpha alumina

Abstract
Bulk samples of single crystalline and polycrystalline alpha alumina have been neutron-irradiated in the Experimental Breeder Reactor-II (EBR-II) to doses of 1026 n/m2 at temperatures of 925 K and 1100 K. The samples were found to swell macroscopically between 3% and 6%, depending on the temperature of irradiation and the form of the material. The damaged microstructures were investigated via transmission electron microscopy in order to understand the origin of the macroscopic swelling. In both single crystals and polycrystals the damage consists of a high density of dislocations containing predominately b = 1/3 dislocation loops on the (0001) planes coexistent with a high density of voids, which are aligned along the c-axis in this rhombohedral material. The established theory of void formation in metals is utilized to explain the formation of voids in alumina. The polycrystalline samples were extensively microcracked, and this is thought to be due to anisotropic swelling of the grains which in turn leads to stresses and fracturing at the grain boundaries.