Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1567221 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2011 | 6 Pages |
Hydrogen embrittlement is one of the major degradation mechanisms for high burnup fuel cladding during reactor service and spent fuel dry storage, which is related to the hydrogen concentration, morphology and orientation of zirconium hydrides. In this work, the J-integral values for X-specimens with different hydride orientations are measured to evaluate the fracture toughness of Zircaloy-4 (Zry-4) cladding. The toughness values for Zry-4 cladding with various percentages of radial hydrides are much smaller than those with circumferential hydrides only in the same hydrogen content level at 25 °C. The fractograghic features reveal that the crack path is influenced by the orientation of zirconium hydride. Moreover, the fracture toughness measurements for X-specimens at 300 °C are not sensitive to a variation in hydride orientation but to hydrogen concentration.
Research highlights► J-integral values of Zry-4 cladding with different hydride orientations are measured. ► Radial hydrides facilitate crack propagation for Zry-4 cladding at 25 °C. ► The ductility of zirconium matrix at 300 °C can diminish hydrogen embrittlement.