4.7 Article

Post-irradiation annealing of high flux irradiated and surveillance material reactor pressure vessel weld metal

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MATERIALS
Volume 562, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2022.153586

Keywords

Atom probe tomography; High flux; Irradiation hardening; Embrittlement; Post irradiation annealing; Clusters; Matrix defects

Funding

  1. Swedish Radiation Safety Authority
  2. Swedish Centre for Nuclear Technology
  3. Nordic Nuclear Safety Research
  4. EU project EN-TENTE [90 0 018]

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In this study, high flux irradiated and surveillance high Ni and Mn and low Cu welds identical to those of the belt-line region of Ringhals R4 were annealed at temperatures between 390 and 455 degrees C for 24-30 hours to investigate the dissolution of irradiation induced clusters and possible matrix defects. The results showed that the cluster characteristics did not change at 390 degrees C, indicating that the size, number density, and composition of the clusters remained unchanged. The decrease in hardness during annealing is believed to be due to the dissolution of stable matrix defects. Cluster dissolution was observed at 410 degrees C in the high flux irradiated material, with around 10% of the original clusters remaining. These clusters had higher Cu content and lower Ni and Mn content compared to before annealing. The dissolution of clusters at temperatures above 400 degrees C was correlated with the decrease in hardness. The larger clusters in the surveillance material required higher temperatures or longer time to be dissolved compared to the clusters in the high flux material.
In this study, high flux irradiated and surveillance high Ni and Mn and low Cu welds identical to those of the belt-line region of Ringhals R4 were subjected to annealing at temperatures between 390 and 455 degrees C for 24-30 h, in order to study the dissolution of irradiation induced clusters and possible matrix defects using hardness testing and atom probe tomography. It was found that the cluster characteristics did not change during annealing at 390 degrees C, meaning that the size, number density and composition of the clusters, which mainly consist of Ni and Mn, did not change. Thus, the observed decrease in hardness during annealing of the high flux irradiated material is believed to be due to dissolution of matrix defects that were stable at the operating temperature. Cluster dissolution was observed after annealing at 410 degrees C in the high flux irradiated material, leaving around 10% of the original clusters. These clusters contained more Cu and less Ni and Mn than before annealing. The cluster dissolution at temperatures above 400 degrees C correlated with the decrease in hardness. The larger clusters of the surveillance material required a higher temperature or longer time to be dissolved compared to the clusters of the high flux material.(c) 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ )

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