Alexey Yanilkin , Alexander Kozlov , Irina Portnykh
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This paper investigates the swelling behavior of Cr16Ni19 austenitic steel used for fuel cladding in the BN-600 reactor. Experimental investigations were conducted over doses of 0.3–48.5 dpa and temperatures of 370–410 °C using high-resolution electron microscopy, which revealed the formation of helium-vacancy bubbles (∼1.5 nm, 1–3·1022 m−3) and, at doses above 5 dpa, voids exceeding 10 nm in diameter. Dislocation density measurements ranged from (3.4–5)· 1014 m−2, increasing to 7·1014 m−2 at lower irradiation temperatures. A kinetic swelling model was then parameterized using these data, along with high-dose measurements (>50 dpa), to predict swelling behavior and compare it with that of AISI 316 steel. The model suggests that Cr16Ni19 steel exhibits enhanced swelling resistance due to a stable dislocation network and a higher concentration of interstitial clusters, likely influenced by its silicon content. Conventional approximation methods were found to underestimate the fuel element's remaining service life, highlighting the need for predictive models that incorporate real time microstructural data.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Nuclear Materials publishes high quality papers in materials research for nuclear applications, primarily fission reactors, fusion reactors, and similar environments including radiation areas of charged particle accelerators. Both original research and critical review papers covering experimental, theoretical, and computational aspects of either fundamental or applied nature are welcome.
The breadth of the field is such that a wide range of processes and properties in the field of materials science and engineering is of interest to the readership, spanning atom-scale processes, microstructures, thermodynamics, mechanical properties, physical properties, and corrosion, for example.
Topics covered by JNM
Fission reactor materials, including fuels, cladding, core structures, pressure vessels, coolant interactions with materials, moderator and control components, fission product behavior.
Materials aspects of the entire fuel cycle.
Materials aspects of the actinides and their compounds.
Performance of nuclear waste materials; materials aspects of the immobilization of wastes.
Fusion reactor materials, including first walls, blankets, insulators and magnets.
Neutron and charged particle radiation effects in materials, including defects, transmutations, microstructures, phase changes and macroscopic properties.
Interaction of plasmas, ion beams, electron beams and electromagnetic radiation with materials relevant to nuclear systems.