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NEEP 541 – Radiation Damage in Steels

NEEP 541 – Radiation Damage in Steels. Fall 2002 Jake Blanchard. Outline. Damage in Steels. Steels in Reactors. Requirements High temperature operation High strength Inexpensive Low corrosion. Steel Types. Austenitic Primarily austenite phase - FCC Stabilized by Ni

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NEEP 541 – Radiation Damage in Steels

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  1. NEEP 541 – Radiation Damage in Steels Fall 2002 Jake Blanchard

  2. Outline • Damage in Steels

  3. Steels in Reactors • Requirements • High temperature operation • High strength • Inexpensive • Low corrosion

  4. Steel Types • Austenitic • Primarily austenite phase - FCC • Stabilized by Ni • Good creep strength • Resists corrosion with sodium and mixed oxide fuels • Inexpensive • High void swelling

  5. Composition

  6. Steel Types • Ferritic Steels • Primarily ferrite – BCC • Cheaper than austenitic steels • Susceptible to DBTT increases

  7. Composition

  8. Microstructure Evolution • Transmission Electron Microscopy is used to study damage • Several hundred keV electron beam passes through sample • Some electrons transmitted, others diffracted • Only transmitted electrons are viewed • Defects alters diffraction conditions • When defects are oriented to transmit better, then they appear as a dark image

  9. Black Dot Structure • Defects produced at low temperatures show up on TEM as black dots • Defects are too small to be resolved • They are believed to be depleted zones or small vacancy clusters • Below 350 C, increased fluence increases black dot density

  10. Other structures • Above 350 C, point defects are mobile • Loops become predominant • Voids also form

  11. Microstructure of Unirradiated SS

  12. Loops in Irradiated SS

  13. Voids in SS

  14. Hardening of Austenitic Steels • Low Fluence • Hardening primarily from depleted zones • At low T (below half the melting temperature), little annealing, hardening occurs • At high T, damage anneals out, no hardening

  15. Hardening of Austenitic Steels • High Fluence • Loops and Voids grow • Annealing is slower

  16. 316 SS

  17. 316 SS

  18. Steel Type Affects Damage • Large differences exist among various types and heat treatments • Weld metal is often more susceptible than base metal • Even a single type of steel can exhibit large variations in damage effects

  19. Transition Temp. for different batches of steel

  20. Differences due to structure • Damage differences can result from: grain size, texture, etc. • Saturation of damage can also be sensitive to microstructure

  21. Saturation

  22. Chemistry • Chemistry may be the most important factor in steel embrittlement • Sulphur and phosphorous are detrimental • Irradiation can form sulfides (MnS, FeS) • These nucleate segregation of copper • Adding N leads to increased hardening, either by forming clusters or collecting in loops

  23. Effect of radiation on DBTTin steel containing Cu

  24. 316 SS, 400 C, 130 dpa

  25. Helium • Some steels have B in them • B has a high He production cross section • He can lead to embrittlement

  26. He Production Cross Sections

  27. Damage in pure Fe • Pure iron: defects are • Small black spots (small loops or planar clusters) • Loops • cavities

  28. Neutron Damage • Must have fluence>4x1023 n/m2 • Threshold is lower for less pure metals • At low fluence, defect distribution is heterogeneous • Clusters and loops are only formed near dislocations or sub-boundaries

  29. Damage in a low-carbon steel • At 275-450 C, cavities observed • Sizes are up to 12 nm in diameter • Concentration up to 1021 /m3 • Above 500 C, cavities only at grain boundaries • No cavities at all above 575 C

  30. Annealing • Annealing pure Fe below 300 C has no effect on black dots • Annealing above 300 C leads to loops • Above 500 C, loops are annealed away

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