Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9793923 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Neutron irradiation-induced relaxation was emulated using proton irradiation in order to determine the expected amount of stress relaxation in the peened surface layer of a BWR core shroud during its 40 year lifetime. Samples of 304 SS were shot peened to induce a compressive residual stress, and then irradiated with 3.2 MeV protons at 288 °C to four dose levels spanning 0.1-2.0 dpa. One set of specimens was as-peened and a second was pre-injected with 25 appm He. Depth-dependent measurements of internal stress were conducted using successive steps of X-ray line broadening measurement and electropolishing. Results showed that the compressive stress state was progressively relaxed, but was maintained at some level for the majority of the 2 dpa target dose. Helium pre-injection did not significantly affect the relaxation, but the magnitude of thermally-induced relaxation was somewhat greater, although it was observed to be largely a transient, saturable process. A new cross-section technique was developed that allows multiple observations to be made in one specimen at all depths, both in and beyond the peen-damaged range. The as-peened microstructure varies strongly with depth, consisting of deformation twins and dense dislocation networks. The radiation-induced relaxation on the microstructural level was expressed primarily in modification and reduction of the dislocation structure. A comparison was made between the proton-induced relaxation of internal stresses and predictions based on neutron-induced relaxation of externally-applied stresses. The relatively good agreement indicates that proton irradiation is a valid emulation of neutron irradiation for this application.
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Authors
B.H. Sencer, G.S. Was, H. Yuya, Y. Isobe, M. Sagisaka, F.A. Garner,