Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7963913 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2016 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Reduced-activation ferritic-martensitic (RAFM) steels, candidate structural materials for fusion reactors, have achieved technological maturity after about three decades of research and development. The recent status of a few developmental aspects of current RAFM steels, such as aging resistance, plate thickness effects, fracture toughness, and fatigue, is updated in this paper, together with ongoing efforts to develop next-generation RAFM steels for superior high-temperature performance. In addition to thermomechanical treatments, including nonstandard heat treatment, alloy chemistry refinements and modifications have demonstrated some improvements in high-temperature performance. Castable nanostructured alloys (CNAs) were developed by significantly increasing the amount of nanoscale MX (M = V/Ta/Ti, X = C/N) precipitates and reducing coarse M23C6 (M = Cr). Preliminary results showed promising improvement in creep resistance and Charpy impact toughness. Limited low-dose neutron irradiation results for one of the CNAs and China low activation martensitic are presented and compared with data for F82H and Eurofer97 irradiated up to â¼70 displacements per atom at â¼300-325 °C.
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Authors
L. Tan, Y. Katoh, A.-A.F. Tavassoli, J. Henry, M. Rieth, H. Sakasegawa, H. Tanigawa, Q. Huang,