
Heavy-Section Steel Irradiation Program: Volume 3, Progress report, October 1991--September 1992
Author(s) -
W.R. Corwin
Publication year - 1995
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/70174
Subject(s) - irradiation , materials science , welding , neutron flux , reactor pressure vessel , microstructure , pressure vessel , annealing (glass) , fracture toughness , fluence , metallurgy , cladding (metalworking) , composite material , neutron , nuclear engineering , nuclear physics , engineering , physics
The primary goal of the Heavy-Section Steel Irradiation Program is to provide a thorough, quantitative assessment of the effects of neutron irradiation on the material behavior, and in particular the fracture toughness properties, of typical pressure vessel steels as they relate to light-water reactor pressure-vessel integrity. Effects of specimen size, material chemistry, product form and microstructure, irradiation fluence, flux, temperature and spectrum, and postirradiation annealing are being examined on a wide range of fracture properties. The HSSI Program is arranged into 10 tasks: (1) program management, (2) K{sub Ic} curve shift in high-copper welds, (3) K{sub Ia} curve shift in high-copper welds, (4) irradiation effects on cladding, (5) K{sub Ic} and K{sub Ia} curve shifts in low upper-shelf welds, (6) irradiation effects in a commercial low upper-shelf weld, (7) microstructural analysis of irradiation effects, (8) in-service aged material evaluations, (9) correlation monitor materials, and (10) special technical assistance. This report provides an overview of the activities within each of these tasks from October 1991 to September 1992