Nuclear energy is a clean and efficient energy source crucial for the future energy supply. The harsh conditions in reactors, including high temperature, high pressure, and intense neutron irradiation, cause structural materials to accumulate irradiation damage, leading to performance degradation. Austenitic stainless steel, due to its superior mechanical properties, irradiation resistance, and corrosion resistance, has been extensively utilized as a core structural material in light water reactors and emerged as a candidate material for Generation IV nuclear reactors. Therefore, understanding irradiation damage and macroscopic properties evolution in austenitic stainless steels is critical for enhancing the safety and long-term service life of reactor core materials. This review began by elucidating the application of charged particles in irradiation studies, emphasizing the prevailing substitution of neutron irradiation with proton irradiation experiments in current studies. Subsequently, the work systematically synthesized irradiation damages and their consequential impacts on macroscopic properties. Finally, it consolidated the progress and provided prospects for research on improving the resistance of austenitic stainless steel to irradiation-induced segregation, irradiation hardening, irradiation swelling, and irradiation-corrosion synergies.
Guo et al. (Tue,) studied this question.