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Understanding H isotope adsorption and absorption of Al-alloys using modeling and experiments (LDRD: #165724)
Author(s) -
Donald K. Ward,
Xiaowang Zhou,
Richard A. Karnesky,
Robert Kolasinski,
Michael S. Foster,
Konrad Thürmer,
Paul Chao,
Ethan N. Epperly,
Jonathan A. Zimmerman,
Bryan M. Wong,
Ryan B. Sills
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1222665
Subject(s) - deuterium , hydrogen embrittlement , materials science , isotope , embrittlement , kinetic isotope effect , adsorption , density functional theory , metallurgy , nuclear physics , chemistry , corrosion , computational chemistry , physics
Current austenitic stainless steel storage reservoirs for hydrogen isotopes (e.g. deuterium and tritium) have performance and operational life-limiting interactions (e.g. embrittlement) with H-isotopes. Aluminum alloys (e.g.AA2219), alternatively, have very low H-isotope solubilities, suggesting high resistance towards aging vulnerabilities. This report summarizes the work performed during the life of the Lab Directed Research and Development in the Nuclear Weapons investment area (165724), and provides invaluable modeling and experimental insights into the interactions of H isotopes with surfaces and bulk AlCu-alloys. The modeling work establishes and builds a multi-scale framework which includes: a density functional theory informed bond-order potential for classical molecular dynamics (MD), and subsequent use of MD simulations to inform defect level dislocation dynamics models. Furthermore, low energy ion scattering and thermal desorption spectroscopy experiments are performed to validate these models and add greater physical understanding to them.

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