Anisotropic growth of aluminium nitride under neutron irradiation

Anisotropic growth of aluminium nitride under neutron irradiation

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR LETTERS ANISOTROPIC 29 (1969) MATERIALS TO THE GROWTH 121-122. EDITORS - OF ALUMINIUM Division, A.A.E.C. Research Rec...

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JOURNAL

OF NUCLEAR

LETTERS ANISOTROPIC

29 (1969)

MATERIALS

TO THE

GROWTH

121-122.

EDITORS

-

OF ALUMINIUM

Division,

A.A.E.C.

Research

Received

LETTRES

NITRIDE

B. S. HICKMAN* Materials

0 NORTH-HOLLAND

PUBLISHINU

AUX

UNDER

CO., AMSTERDAM

REDACTEURS NEUTRON

IRRADIATION

and A. JOSTSONS Establishment,

15 August

Sutherland,

N.S. W.,

Australia

1968

The anisotropic lattice growth in beryllium oxide under neutron irradiation has been the subject of considerable study and speculation because of the potential technological impor-

a number of structurally related oxides has been studied in this laboratory. Zinc oxide has

tance of the material and because of the detrimental effect this growth has on the properties of polycrystalline material 1). However, no satisfactory explanation of the phenomenon exists. Explanations in terms of anisotropic elastic distortions arising from the planar defect clusters, which are known to exist parallel to the basal plane I), run into difficulty because of the different annealing behaviour of the anisotropic growth and the planar defect clusters 3). It has been suggested 3) that the effect is associated with the formation of domains of a second phase, but no direct evidence has been found for the presence of a sufficient quantity

manner 4) ; basal plane clusters are formed and the lattice growth is anisotropic. On the other hand, aluminium oxide which has the same hexagonal oxygen sub-lattice as the wurtzite structure, expands in an essentially isotropic manner 5). Chrysoberyl (Al3O3. BeO), which also has essentially the same oxygen lattice expands anisotropically 3) but to a much lesser degree than in Be0 and ZnO. In this note we report

the same wurtzite structure as beryllium oxide and has been shown to behave in a similar

results on a third wurtzite type material, aluminium nitride. Single crystal whiskers of aluminium nitride, approximately 0.5 mm in diameter by 20-30 mm long, obtained from Semi Elements Inc., were neutron irradiated to a range of fast neutron doses at 75-100 “C in the reactor HIFAR.

of these domains to give the observed effect. In view of the uncertainty regarding the mechanism of anisotropic growth in beryllium oxide the growth

under neutron

irradiation

Lattice parameters were measured using a Bond spectrometer 7). The results in table 1 show that the lattice growth is again highly anisotropic,

of

TABLE 1 Lattice

growth of almmm ’ ‘um nitride under neutron

Neutron nvt

*

Present

irradiation

dose

(> 1 MeV)

Aala

(%)

at 75 to 100 “C

Av/v (%) (from X-ray data)

AC/C (%)

3.8 x 10’9

0.126 & 0.003

0.202 & 0.004

0.454 f

0.010

6.8 x 10’S

0.177 If: 0.004

0.277 & 0.003

0.631 f

0.011

1.3 x 1020

0.176 -& 0.004

0.423 & 0.004

0.775 *

0.012

2.1 x 1020

0.203 + 0.004

0.614 + 0.005

1.020 *

0.013

2.8 x 1020

0.193 & 0.003

0.747 & 0.005

1.133 f

0.011

3.7 x 1020

0.185 f

0.864 & 0.005

1.234 f

0.017

address:

Science Center/North

0.006

/

American 121

Rockwell

Corporation,

Thousand

Oaks,

California.

122 although

B.

S.

the degree of anisotropy

HICKMAN

AND

is less than

that in BeO. As with both Be0 and ZnO, the a-parameter change saturates at a low dose. Examination

of the data suggests

is a tendency

towards saturation

meter change at the higher doses. The material did exhibit a major to both beryllium

that there

of the c-para-

A.

JOSTSONS

similarity of the reciprocal lattice streaking to that in Be0 suggests that these clusters are of similar form, i.e., interstitial

those previously difference

oxide and zinc oxide in that

up to a dose of 2.8 x lo20 nvt (> 1 MeV), the X-ray reflections remained sharp. Reciprocal lattice photography using a precession camera showed no evidence for reciprocal lattice streaking at this dose although very weak diffuse streaks in the C * direction through (100) reflections in (HOL) projections were detected after long exposures (170 h with filtered MoK, radiation) of specimens irradiated to 3.7 x 1020 nvt. Transmission electron microscopy on flakes obtained by crushing the irradiated crystals showed evidence of cluster formation in specimens irradiated to 2.8 x lo20 nvt and 3.7 x lo20 nvt. The number of defect clusters, observed as “black dots” in images of (0002) reflections, increased with dose. The observation of “black images in irradiated flakes and the dot”

plates parallel

to the basal plane. The similarity of the present observations materials vations

to

reported for the other wurtzite

and the limited

extent of the obser-

do not permit any further speculation

regarding

the nature

of the mechanisms

ponsible for the anisotropic growth materials on neutron irradiation.

re-

in these

Useful discussions with T. M. Sabine D. G. Walker are acknowledged.

and

References 1)

B. S. Hickman, Studies in radiation effects, series A, 1 (1967) 77 2) D. G. Walker, J. Nuol. Mat. 15 (1965) 111

3)

J. M. Cowley,

4)

B.

5)

18 (1966) 6) A.

Cryst.

21 (1966)

192

W.

197

Jo&sons and B. S. Hickman, J. Nucl. Mat.

25 (1968) 7)

Acta

Hickman, J. Nucl. Mat. 17 (1965) 270 B. S. Hickman and D. G. Walker, J. Nucl. Mat’. S.

278

L. Bond,

Acta

Cryst.

13 (1960)

814