Measurements have been made on the concentrations of vacancies and interstitial clusters in singlecrystal graphite irradiated with neutrons in a reactor and with carbon ions in an accelerator. The irradiations were carried out over a range of temperatures from 30" to 1100ยฐC and a range of total init
187. The effect of the random formation of vacancy complexes on the irradiation induced properties of graphite
โ Scribed by P Horner
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1965
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 242 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-6223
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โฆ Synopsis
The energy required to displace a carbon atom from its normal lattice site has been determined directly by detection of the lattice vacancies resulting from the displacement process. Annealed natural crystals of graphite containing less than 10-i' vacancies per carbon atom were irradiated at room temperature with electrons of selected energies in the range from 100 to 500 KeV. These crystals were then cleaved to a thickness of a few hundred ~~~o~, etched in a mixture of oxygen and chlorine to enlarge the lattice vacancies present in the surface planes, decorated by deposition of a thin layer of gold, and examined in an electron microscope. The vacancies then appear as rings of gold particles. Examination of crystals irradiated with electrons of energies less than 140 KeV showed that these irradiations produced no vacancies; whereas, examination of crystals irradiated with electrons of energies exceeding 150 KeV revealed a production of vacancies, the concentration increasing with the electron energy. From these observations it may be concluded that the displacement energy in graphite is approximately 30 eV. This value is in rough agreement with that found by Qgen, (') but is in disagreement with the value recently reported by Lucas and Mitchell(2) It may be that the orientation of the crystal with respect to the electron beam and its temperature during irradiation are important factors in the displacement process; perhaps the discrepancies can be explained by investigating the influence of these factors on the displacement energy. *Based on work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. 1. EGGEN D. T., Report MAA-SR-69 (1955). 2. LUCAS M. W. and MITCHELL E. W. J., Carbon 1, 345 (1964).
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kinematical theory of diffraction contrast has been applied to distinguish between vacancy and interstitial clusters. Interstitial clusters are the only ones which have been positively identified. The annealing of the clusters of defects has been studied in detail and activation energies derived. Th