Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7967760 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2014 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Nanostructured ferritic alloys (NFAs) have been considered as primary candidate materials for both fission and fusion reactors because of their excellent creep and irradiation resistances. It has been shown that high temperature fracture toughness could be significantly improved by appropriate thermo-mechanical treatments (TMTs). This article focuses on the static fracture behaviors of newly developed 9Cr NFAs with improved toughness. Optimal TMTs resulted in high fracture toughness at room temperature (>250 MPa âm) and in retaining higher than 100 MPa âm over a wide temperature range of 22-700 °C. Significant differences were found in fracture surfaces and fracture resistance (J-R) curves after different TMTs. Unique fracture surface features such as shallow nanoscale facets decorated with shear lips and flake-like grains were observed in high toughness specimens.
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Authors
Thak Sang Byun, Ji Hyun Yoon, Sung Hun Wee, David T. Hoelzer, Stuart A. Maloy,