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Defect landscape engineering suppresses helium damage in ceramics

Research Abstract

Helium accumulation in structural ceramics used in nuclear, fusion, and aerospace systems causes swelling, cracking, and early failure, yet controlling this damage has remained elusive. Here, we introduce defect landscape engineering, the deliberate creation of vacancy clusters prior to helium exposure, as a general strategy to suppress helium-induced degradation. Using α-SiC as a model, we combine advanced microscopy, strain mapping, helium depth profiling, positron annihilation spectroscopy, and atomistic simulations to demonstrate that tailored pre-damage transforms helium defect evolution. Instead of forming extended platelets and nanocracks, helium is trapped in stable, uniformly dispersed nanobubbles. Simulations reveal that small vacancy clusters act as dual-function sinks for irradiation-induced interstitials and preferential traps for helium, fundamentally altering the dynamics of cascade recombination. This mechanism is composition-independent and scalable, offering a new design principle for radiation-tolerant ceramics across carbides, nitrides, and oxides. By viewing defect control as a tunable parameter instead of a fixed material property, this work outlines a possible design route toward enhanced radiation tolerance in ceramics used in extreme environments.

Research Authors
Nabil Daghbouj, Ahmed Tamer AlMotasem, Bingsheng Li, Vladimir Krsjak, Jan Duchoň, Fang Ge, Maciej Oskar Liedke, Andreas Wagner, Mohamed Bensalem, Fateh Bahadur, Frans Munnik, Miroslav Karlik, Anna Macková, Tomas Polcar, William J Weber
Research Date
Research Department
Research Journal
Communcations Materials
Research Pages
97
Research Publisher
Nature Group
Research Rank
Q1
Research Vol
7
Research Website
https://www.nature.com/articles/s43246-026-01083-3
Research Year
2026