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Webb, G.L.; Burke, M.G.
Westinghouse Electric Corp., West Mifflin, PA (United States). Bettis Atomic Power Lab. Funding organisation: USDOE, Washington, DC (United States)1995
Westinghouse Electric Corp., West Mifflin, PA (United States). Bettis Atomic Power Lab. Funding organisation: USDOE, Washington, DC (United States)1995
AbstractAbstract
[en] SCC susceptibility of Alloy 600 in deaerated water at 360 C (statically loaded U-bend specimens) is dependent on microstructure and whether the material was cold-worked and annealed (CWA) or hot-worked and annealed (HWA). All cracking was intergranular, and materials lacking grain boundary carbides were most susceptible to SCC initiation. CWA tubing materials are more susceptible to SCC initiation than HWA ring-rolled forging materials with similar microstructures (optical metallography). In CWA tubing materials, one crack dominated and grew to a visible size. HWA materials with a low hot-working finishing temperature (<925 C) and final anneals at 1010-1065 C developed both large cracks (similar to those in CWA materials) and small intergranular microcracks detectable only by destructive metallography. HWA materials with a high hot-working finishing temperature (>980 C) and a high-temperature final anneal (>1040 C), with grain boundaries that are fully decorated, developed only microcracks in all specimens. These materials did not develop large, visually detectable cracks, even after more than 300 weeks exposure. A low-temperature thermal treatment (610 C for 7h), which reduces or eliminates SCC in Alloy 600, did not eliminate microcrack formation in high temperature processed HWA materials. Conventional metallographic and analytical electron microscopy (AEM) were done on selected materials to identify the factors responsible for the observed differences in cracking behavior. Major difference between high-temperature HWA and low-temperature HWA and CWA materials was that the high temperature processing and final annealing produced predominantly ''semi-continuous'' dendritic M7C3 carbides along grain boundaries with a minimal amount of intragranular carbides. Lower temperature processing produced intragranular M7C3 carbides, with less intergranular carbides
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1995; 16 p; 7. NACE international symposium on environmental degradation of materials in nuclear power plants: water reactors; Breckenridge, CO (United States); 6-10 Aug 1995; CONF-950816--2; CONTRACT AC11-93PN38195; Also available from OSTI as DE95014554; NTIS; US Govt. Printing Office Dep
Record Type
Report
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Conference
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ALLOY-NI76CR15FE8, ALLOYS, ALUMINIUM ADDITIONS, CHEMICAL REACTIONS, CHROMIUM ALLOYS, CORROSION, CORROSION RESISTANT ALLOYS, CRYSTAL STRUCTURE, HEAT RESISTANT MATERIALS, HEAT RESISTING ALLOYS, INCONEL ALLOYS, IRON ALLOYS, MATERIALS, NICKEL ALLOYS, NICKEL BASE ALLOYS, NIMONIC, TITANIUM ADDITIONS, TRANSITION ELEMENT ALLOYS
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