Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
298895 Nuclear Engineering and Design 2008 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

During severe accident of a light water reactor (LWR), the piping of the reactor cooling system would be damaged when the piping is subjected to high internal pressure and very high temperature, resulted from high temperature gas generated in a reactor core and decay heat released from the deposit of fission products. It is considered that, under such a condition, short-term creep at high temperatures would cause the piping failure. For the evaluation of piping integrity under a severe accident, a method to predict such high temperature short-term creep deformation should be developed, using a creep constitutive equation considering tertiary creep. In this paper, the creep constitutive equation including tertiary creep was applied to nuclear-grade cold-drawn pipe of 316 stainless steel (SUS316), based on the isotropic damage mechanics proposed by Kachanov and Ravotnov. Tensile creep test data for the material of a SUS316 cold-drawn pipe were used to determine the coefficients of the creep constitutive equation. Using the constitutive equation taking account of creep damage, finite element analyses were performed for the local creep deformation of the coolant piping under two types of conditions; uniform temperature (isothermal condition) and temperature gradient of circumferential direction (non-isothermal condition). The analytical results show that the damage variable integrated into the creep constitutive equation can predict the pipe failure in the test performed by Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute, in which failure occurred from the outside of the pipe wall.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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