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Bloom, E.E.; Wolfer, W.G.
Oak Ridge National Lab., TN (USA); Wisconsin Univ., Madison (USA). Dept. of Nuclear Engineering1978
Oak Ridge National Lab., TN (USA); Wisconsin Univ., Madison (USA). Dept. of Nuclear Engineering1978
AbstractAbstract
[en] An experimental technique for determining in-reactor fracture strain was developed and demonstrated. Differential swelling between a sample holder and a test specimen with a lower swelling rate produced uniaxial deformation. In-reactor deformations of 0.7 to 2.1% were achieved in type 304 stainless steel previously irradiated to fluences up to 8.8 x 1026 n/m2 without fracture. These strains are significantly higher than found in postirradiation creep-rupture tests on similar samples. From the measured strain values and published irradiation creep data and correlations, the stress levels during the irradiation were calculated. On the basis of previous postirradiation creep-rupture results, many of the samples that did not fail would be predicted to fail. Thus we conclude that the in-reactor rupture life is longer than predicted by postirradiation tests. Strain in a fractured sample was estimated to be less than 3.8%, and the in-reactor fractures were intergranular--the same fracture mode as found in postirradiation tests. Irradiation creep may relax stresses at crack tips and sliding boundaries, thus retarding the initiation and/or growth of cracks and leading to longer rupture lives in-reactor. However, the very high ductility or superplastic behavior predicted by the strain rate sensitivity of irradiation creep is not achieved because of the eventual interruption of the deformation process by grain boundary fracture
Primary Subject
Source
1978; 19 p; 9. symposium on effects of radiation in structural materials; Richland, WA, USA; 10 - 14 Jul 1978; Available from NTIS., PC A02/MF A01
Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Conference
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ALLOYS, BARYONS, CARBON ADDITIONS, CHROMIUM ALLOYS, CHROMIUM STEELS, CHROMIUM-NICKEL STEELS, CORROSION RESISTANT ALLOYS, DEFORMATION, ELEMENTARY PARTICLES, FAILURES, FERMIONS, HADRONS, HEAT RESISTING ALLOYS, IRON ALLOYS, IRON BASE ALLOYS, NICKEL ALLOYS, NUCLEONS, RADIATION EFFECTS, STAINLESS STEELS, STEELS, TRANSITION ELEMENT ALLOYS
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