Boopathy Kombaiah

Profile Information
Name
Dr Boopathy Kombaiah
Institution
Helion Energy
Position
Principal Materials Engineer
h-Index
ORCID
0000-0001-5706-2534
Publications:
"In situ TEM annealing of neutron-irradiated Ti reveals a two-stage mechanism for elevated temperature radiation damage recovery" Charles Hirst, Boopathy Kombaiah, Kevin Field, Michael Short, Journal of Nuclear Materials Vol. 271 2025 117001 Link
Understanding how irradiation-induced defects evolve at elevated temperatures is of critical importance to predicting materials’ behavior under steady-state and accident scenarios. However, such mechanistic insight into microstructural evolution is limited by the nature of ex situ annealing and subsequent imaging. Here we show direct observation and quantification of defect recovery in neutron-irradiated Ti using in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) annealing experiments. In agreement with our prior work, and at temperatures below the irradiation temperature (T𝑖𝑟𝑟 = 300 ◦C), dislocation loops are observed to glide. At elevated temperatures (>500 ◦C), dislocation lines become mobile and promote significant recovery of the microstructure. These mechanisms challenge the established electron irradiation-based model for radiation damage recovery, which originally suggests dissolution of static defect clusters, and demonstrates the importance of iin situ characterization in understanding defect evolution in irradiated materials.
"Revealing hidden defects through stored energy measurements of radiation damage" Charles Hirst, Boopathy Kombaiah, Scott Middlemas, Ju Li, Michael Short, Science Advances Vol. 8 2022 eabn2733 Link
With full knowledge of a material’s atomistic structure, it is possible to predict any macroscopic property of interest. In practice, this is hindered by limitations of the chosen characterization techniques. For example, electron microscopy is unable to detect the smallest and most numerous defects in irradiated materials. Instead of spatial characterization, we propose to detect and quantify defects through their excess energy. Differential scanning calorimetry of irradiated Ti measures defect densities five times greater than those determined using transmission electron microscopy. Our experiments also reveal two energetically distinct processes where the established annealing model predicts one. Molecular dynamics simulations discover the defects responsible and inform a new mechanism for the recovery of irradiation-induced defects. The combination of annealing experiments and simulations can reveal defects hidden to other characterization techniques and has the potential to uncover new mechanisms behind the evolution of defects in materials.