Classical nucleation theory of microstructure development under cascade-damage irradiation

2003 
Cascade irradiation produces a significant fraction of the damage in the form of small mobile and immobile vacancy and interstitial clusters. This has led to the introduction of the Woo–Singh production bias theory. In the pursuant studies, the predominant effort that has been spent is in investigating the validity of the concept, and in its usefulness in complementing the traditional theory based on the concept of sink bias. Although plenty of theoretical and experimental results supports the concept, relatively little attention has been paid to the important area of microstructure nucleation. Within the framework of the classical theory of nucleation of overcritical precipitates from small subcritical nuclei, the nucleation processes at elevated temperatures of both voids and interstitial loops from the primary clusters are similar, and can be similarly treated. Recognizing the importance of stochastic fluctuations in the evolution of small embryos, a single-component nucleation theory is formulated using the Fokker–Planck equation, to take into account the stochastic effects of the fluxes of mobile defects, arising from the random nature of diffusion jumps and cascade initiation. Analytic solutions for the separate cases of voids and Frank loops are obtained, and the corresponding effects on the evolution of the microstructure are discussed.
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