Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1565179 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2014 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Ferritic and ferritic/martensitic oxide dispersion-strengthened (ODS) steels are a promising class of materials with high potential for application at high temperature and irradiation. Creep-to-rupture behavior of such steels with 12 and 14 mass% chromium (Cr) was tested in stagnant oxygen-controlled liquid lead and air at 650 °C and 125-400 MPa engineering stress. Liquid Pb affects insignificantly creep strength of both steels in comparison to air. In general, 12Cr-ODS shows slightly better creep performance than 14Cr-ODS. A significant change in the stress exponent n of the Norton occurs around 330 MPa and 380 MPa for 12Cr- and 14Cr-ODS, respectively, pointing at a change in creep mechanism of the ODS steels. Additionally, brittle fracture at low stress or strain rate changes to ductile fracture at high stress/strain rate as indicated by increasing necking and strain at rupture.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Mariya Yurechko, Carsten Schroer, Aleksandr Skrypnik, Olaf Wedemeyer, Jürgen Konys,