“…Starting from the elementary processes mentioned above 7 , steadystate rate equations have been used to study the effects of preferential absorption of self-interstitial atoms at sinks (absorption bias) 8,9 , the formation of interstitial cluster during the cascade phase (production bias) 8,9,10,11 , and the one-dimensional motion of these clusters in bcc metals 9,10,11 . kMC models were first used to evolve the primary damage state obtained from ns-long MD simulations to macroscopic time scales, but have increasingly been used to study the evolution of defect structure during continuous irradiation in copper 12,13,14 , vanadium 15 and iron 16 . Although many treatments have included a high level of atomistic detail from the start, we begin by analyzing the simplest situation that includes only production of Frenkel pairs, point defect recombination and absorption at sinks in Section II.…”