Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7965630 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The Fe-Cr-Al alloy system has the potential to form an important class of enhanced accident-tolerant cladding materials in the nuclear power industry owing to the alloy system's higher oxidation resistance in high-temperature steam environments compared with traditional zirconium-based alloys. However, radiation tolerance of Fe-Cr-Al alloys has not been fully established. In this study, a series of Fe-Cr-Al alloys with 10-18 wt % Cr and 2.9-4.9 wt % Al were neutron irradiated at 382 °C to 1.8 dpa to investigate the irradiation-induced microstructural and mechanical property evolution as a function of alloy composition. Dislocation loops with Burgers vector of a/2ã111ã and aã100ã were detected and quantified. Results indicate precipitation of Cr-rich αⲠis primarily dependent on the bulk chromium composition. Mechanical testing of sub-size-irradiated tensile specimens indicates the hardening response seen after irradiation is dependent on the bulk chromium composition. A structure-property relationship was developed; it indicated that the change in yield strength after irradiation is caused by the formation of these radiation-induced defects and is dominated by the large number density of Cr-rich αⲠprecipitates at sufficiently high chromium contents after irradiation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Kevin G. Field, Xunxiang Hu, Kenneth C. Littrell, Yukinori Yamamoto, Lance L. Snead,