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AbstractAbstract
[en] Plastic deformation of EBR-II-irradiated Type 304 stainless steel was investigated by a stress-relaxation method. The stress-strain-rate relationships for the irradiated specimens at room temperature are concave upward, which are similar to those for the unirradiated specimens. However, concave downward behavior in the stress-strain-rate relationships were observed at much lower temperatures for the irradiated specimens in contrast to the unirradiated specimens. These results were analyzed succccessfully using Hart's mechanical equation-of-state concept. It was found that the hardness sigma*, which is the minimum stress necessary for the dislocation to overcome obstacles without thermal activation, increases linearly with fast-neutron fluence. This increase in sigma* is consistent with so-called ''irradiation hardening.'' In addition, resistance to dislocation glide, which is quantitatively measured in terms of sigma0, was observed to decrease linearly with fast-neutron fluence. The decrease in sigma0 can be attributed to a decrease of solute drag due to irradiation-induced solute segregation
Primary Subject
Source
1978; 18 p; 107. AIME meeting; Denver, CO, USA; 26 Feb - 2 Mar 1978; Available from NTIS., PC A02/MF A01
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Report
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Conference
Report Number
Country of publication
ALLOYS, BARYONS, CARBON ADDITIONS, CHROMIUM ALLOYS, CHROMIUM STEELS, CHROMIUM-NICKEL STEELS, CORROSION RESISTANT ALLOYS, ELEMENTARY PARTICLES, FERMIONS, HADRONS, HARDENING, HEAT RESISTING ALLOYS, IRON ALLOYS, IRON BASE ALLOYS, MECHANICAL PROPERTIES, NEUTRONS, NICKEL ALLOYS, NUCLEONS, RADIATION EFFECTS, STAINLESS STEELS, STEELS, TRANSITION ELEMENT ALLOYS
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