Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7968234 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2014 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The experiments described herein were designed to investigate the detailed irradiation creep behavior of zirconium based alloys in the HALDEN Reactor spectrum. The HALDEN Test Reactor has the unique capability to control both applied stress and temperature independently and externally for each specimen while the specimen is in-reactor and under fast neutron flux. The ability to monitor in situ the creep rates following a stress and temperature change made possible the characterization of creep behavior over a wide stress-strain-rate-temperature design space for two model experimental heats, Zircaloy-2 and Zircaloy-2Â +Â 1Â wt%Nb, with only 12 test specimens in a 100-day in-pile creep test program. Zircaloy-2 specimens with and without 1Â wt% Nb additions were tested at irradiation temperatures of 561Â K and 616Â K and stresses ranging from 69Â MPa to 455Â MPa. Various steady state creep models were evaluated against the experimental results. The irradiation creep model proposed by Nichols that separates creep behavior into low, intermediate, and high stress regimes was the best model for predicting steady-state creep rates. Dislocation-based primary creep, rather than diffusion-based transient irradiation creep, was identified as the mechanism controlling deformation during the transitional period of evolving creep rate following a step change to different test conditions.
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Authors
R.W. Kozar, A.W. Jaworski, T.W. Webb, R.W. Smith,