Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7968520 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2014 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
The effect of low- and high-temperature neutron irradiation on the tensile strength, microhardness, and fracture mode has been studied for a series of Mo-Re welds with various Re concentrations. Radiation-induced hardening and concurrent ductility reduction are the key after-effects of neutron exposure. Low-temperature irradiation usually leads to a very hard embrittlement. The hardening effect is rather limited and unstable because of the lack of ductility. Irradiated specimens fail by brittle intergranular or transgranular fracture. The damaging effect of neutrons is less pronounced after high-temperature irradiation. The hardening of the matrix is rather high, but irradiated specimens still keep residual plasticity. High-temperature irradiation intensifies homogeneous nucleation of Re-rich phases, and this effect equalises the difference in mechanical properties between the different weld zones. A characteristic ductility loss exposure temperature was found to separate the temperature fields of absolutely brittle and relatively ductile behaviour. It usually varies between 850Â K and 1000Â K depending on the alloy composition and irradiation conditions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
A.V. Krajnikov, F. Morito, M.I. Danylenko,