Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1567935 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2009 | 5 Pages |
A ‘history effects’ experiment was conducted in EBR-II that involved the reirradiation of AISI 304 cladding and capsule tubes. It is shown that when irradiated tubes had not previously experienced stress, subsequent irradiation led to additional swelling strains that were isotropically distributed. However, when tubes previously irradiated under a 2:1 biaxial stress were reirradiated without stress the additional swelling strains were not isotropically distributed. The tubes obviously retained a memory of the previous stress state that appears to be attempting to distribute strains in the directions dictated by the previous stress state. It is clear, however, that the memory of that stress state is fading as the anisotropic dislocation microstructure developed during irradiation under stress is replaced by an isotropic dislocation microstructure during subsequent exposure in the absence of stress. It is also shown that once the transient regime of swelling nears completion, further changes in stress state or irradiation temperature have no influence on the swelling rate thereafter.