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Dose and dose rate dependence of precipitation in a series of surveillance RPV steels under ion and neutron irradiation.

Authors :
Kamboj, Anshul
Almirall, Nathan
Yamamoto, Takuya
Tumey, Scott
Marquis, Emmanuelle A.
Odette, G. Robert
Source :
Journal of Nuclear Materials. Jan2024, Vol. 588, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Life extension of light water reactors requires robust models to predict the embrittlement of reactor pressure vessel (RPV) steels under long-term neutron irradiation. Embrittlement is due to nanoscale precipitation hardening by phases containing Cu, Mn, Ni, and Si, resulting in increases of the ductile to brittle transition temperature. Embrittlement data for low flux, high fluence extended life conditions, up to 80 years or more, are largely not available. Thus, higher flux, accelerated test reactor irradiations have been used to help develop models to predict low flux embrittlement at high fluence. Here flux, or dose rate, is expressed in units of displacements per atom per second (dpa/s). The dose rate can significantly influence precipitate evolution in a way that depends on fluence (dpa), temperature, and alloy composition, as well as flux itself. Here, we explore precipitation in surveillance steels with varying compositions at high fluxes (10−5–10−6 dpa/s) produced using 70 MeV Fe2+ ion irradiations. Atom probe tomography was used to characterize the dose dependence of precipitation at very high ion irradiation dose rates, and to evaluate corresponding similarities or differences compared to neutron irradiated steels at a much lower dose rate of ≈ 5 × 10−9 dpa/s. The data show that, on average, the ion irradiation precipitate volume fractions increase by factors of ∼ 1.5 to 2 between 0.3 dpa and 1.2 dpa. Limited data show that the major effect of neutron versus ion irradiation is the former has lower precipitate number densities and larger sizes. Otherwise, the precipitates are remarkably similar in composition and volume fraction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00223115
Volume :
588
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Nuclear Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174527615
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnucmat.2023.154772