Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1565429 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2013 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Neutron-irradiated specimens of the reduced-activation tempered martensitic steel EUROFER97 were tested by tensile and low cycle conditions to detect the impact of irradiation on strength and lifetime. The irradiation temperature ranged from 523 to 723 K with an accumulated dose of up to 16.3 dpa. Tensile tests revealed a significant irradiation-induced hardening below 673 K with a peak of â¼430 MPa at 573 K but none was seen at 723 K, as expected. Despite the significant irradiation-induced reduction of uniform elongation, the total elongation is only reduced by about 50% below 673 K. Post-irradiation strain-controlled fatigue tests have been carried out at Tirrad = Ttest = 523, 623 and 723 K. Pronounced cyclic softening was observed in all specimens. At 623 and 723 K, neutron irradiation had no effect on fatigue life within the data scatter. A significant lifetime increase has been observed at Tirrad = Ttest = 523 K that advances with decreasing stress amplitude Îε (1% â 0.5%) up to a factor of ten. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis revealed ductile fracture and fatigue striations on the fracture surfaces. After push-pull fatigue testing, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) investigations showed the typical sub-cell formation, even at Tirrad = Ttest = 523 K.
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Authors
E. Materna-Morris, A. Möslang, H.-C. Schneider,