Overview
- Editors:
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S. E. Donnelly
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The University of Salford, Salford, UK
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J. H. Evans
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AEA Technology, Harwell, UK
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Table of contents (39 chapters)
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Inert Gas Bubbles in Metals Following Room-Temperature Implantation: Other Techniques
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Front Matter
Pages 193-193
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- B. Viswanathan, G. Amarendra
Pages 209-219
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- M. Eldrup, J. Skov Pedersen, A. Horsewell, K. O. Jensen, J. H. Evans
Pages 221-229
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- M. J. W. Greuter, G. L. Zhang, L. Niesen, F. J. M. Buters, A. van Veen
Pages 231-242
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- H. Pattyn, P. Hendrickx, S. Bukshpan
Pages 243-250
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- J. Bohr, L. Gråbæk, H. H. Andersen, A. Johansen, E. Johnson, L. Sarholt-Kristensen et al.
Pages 265-276
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Inert Gas Bubbles in Metals: High-Temperature Bubble Evolution
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Front Matter
Pages 287-287
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- H. Schroeder, P. F. P. Fichtner, H. Trinkaus
Pages 289-297
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- P. F. P. Fichtner, H. Schroeder, H. Trinkaus
Pages 299-306
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- F. Paschoud, M. Victoria, R. Gotthardt
Pages 321-327
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- V. N. Chernikov, P. R. Kazansky, H. Trinkaus, P. Jung, H. Ullmaier
Pages 329-336
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- D. B. Kuzminov, V. N. Chemikov
Pages 337-346
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Bubble Growth Mechanisms
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Front Matter
Pages 347-347
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- S. E. Donnelly, D. R. G. Mitchell, A. van Veen
Pages 357-367
About this book
The NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Fundamental Aspects of Inert Gases in Solids, held at Bonas, France from 16-22 September 1990, was the fifth in a series of meetings that have been held in this topic area since 1979. The Consultants' Meeting in that year at Harwell on Rare Gas Behaviour in Metals and Ionic Solids was followed in 1982 by the Jiilich Inter national Symposium on Fundamental Aspects of Helium in Metals. Two smaller meetings have followed-a CECAM organised workshop on Helium Bubbles in Metals was held at Orsay, France in 1986 while in February 1989, a Topical Symposium on Noble Gases in Metals was held in Las Vegas as part of the large TMS/AIME Spring Meeting. As is well known, the dominating feature of inert gas atoms in most solids is their high heat of solution, leading in most situations to an essentially zero solubility and gas-atom precipita tion. In organising the workshop, one particular aim was to target the researchers in the field of inert-gas/solid interactions from three different areas--namely metals, tritides and nuclear fuels-in order to encourage and foster the cross-fertilisation of approaches and ideas. In these three material classes, the behaviour of inert gases in metals has probably been most studied, partly from technological considerations-the effects of helium production via (n, a) reac tions during neutron irradiation are of importance, particularly in a fusion reactor environ ment-and partly from a more fundamental viewpoint.
Editors and Affiliations
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The University of Salford, Salford, UK
S. E. Donnelly
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AEA Technology, Harwell, UK
J. H. Evans