Structural integrity issues with Gen IV proposals: fast reactors and PBMR

2012 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 377-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Knott
Author(s):  
William J. O’Donnell ◽  
Amy B. Hull ◽  
Shah Malik

Since the 1980s, the ASME Code has made numerous improvements in elevated-temperature structural integrity technology. These advances have been incorporated into Section II, Section VIII, Code Cases, and particularly Subsection NH of Section III of the Code, “Components in Elevated Temperature Service.” The current need for designs for very high temperature and for Gen IV systems requires the extension of operating temperatures from about 1400°F (760°C) to about 1742°F (950°C) where creep effects limit structural integrity, safe allowable operating conditions, and design life. Materials that are more creep and corrosive resistant are needed for these higher operating temperatures. Material models are required for cyclic design analyses. Allowable strains, creep fatigue and creep rupture interaction evaluation methods are needed to provide assurance of structural integrity for such very high temperature applications. Current ASME Section III design criteria for lower operating temperature reactors are intended to prevent through-wall cracking and leaking and corresponding criteria are needed for high temperature reactors. Subsection NH of Section III was originally developed to provide structural design criteria and limits for elevated-temperature design of Liquid-Metal Fast Breeder Reactor (LMFBR) systems and some gas-cooled systems. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and its Advisory Committee for Reactor Safeguards (ACRS) reviewed the design limits and procedures in the process of reviewing the Clinch River Breeder Reactor (CRBR) for a construction permit in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and identified issues that needed resolution. In the years since then, the NRC, DOE and various contractors have evaluated the applicability of the ASME Code and Code Cases to high-temperature reactor designs such as the VHTGRs, and identified issues that need to be resolved to provide a regulatory basis for licensing. The design lifetime of Gen IV Reactors is expected to be 60 years. Additional materials including Alloy 617 and Hastelloy X need to be fully characterized. Environmental degradation effects, especially impure helium and those noted herein, need to be adequately considered. Since cyclic finite element creep analyses will be used to quantify creep rupture, creep fatigue, creep ratcheting and strain accumulations, creep behavior models and constitutive relations are needed for cyclic creep loading. Such strain- and time-hardening models must account for the interaction between the time-independent and time-dependent material response. This paper describes the evolving structural integrity evaluation approach for high temperature reactors. Evaluation methods are discussed, including simplified analysis methods, detailed analyses of localized areas, and validation needs. Regulatory issues including weldment cracking, notch weakening, creep fatigue/creep rupture damage interactions, and materials property representations for cyclic creep behavior are also covered.


Energies ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 2079 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter Borreani ◽  
Alessandro Alemberti ◽  
Guglielmo Lomonaco ◽  
Fabrizio Magugliani ◽  
Paolo Saracco
Keyword(s):  
Gen Iv ◽  

Author(s):  
Rémi Delville ◽  
Erich Stergar ◽  
Marc Verwerft

Titanium stabilized 1.4970 ‘15-15Ti’ stainless steel cladding is the primary choice for fuel cladding of several current fast spectrum research reactor projects. The choice of cladding material is based on past experiences and the availability of material databases from similar steel grades that have proven their reliability in past sodium-cooled fast reactors programs. However the last production in Europe of nuclear-grade 15-15Ti was more than 20 years ago and it remained to be seen if the know-how to produce such steel with the strict specifications for nuclear fuel cladding was still available. Results of a new production of nuclear-grade 15-15Ti cladding tubes at Sandvik for SCK•CEN is presented in this paper. It is shown that materials properties are within the strict specifications similar to the ones used during past sodium-cooled fast reactors programs. Special attention is given to microstructural analysis of the newly produced steel which contains a large number of stabilizing Ti(C-N) precipitates known for their beneficial effect on in-pile material properties and thermal creep. Results from metallography, SEM and TEM investigations are presented.


Author(s):  
Marie-Noe¨l Berton ◽  
Olivier Ancelet ◽  
Marie The´re`se Cabrillat ◽  
Ste´phane Chapuliot

The RCC-MR creep-fatigue rules were developed and written in the framework of studies for the first SFR (Sodium Fast Reactors). These reactors were characterized by low primary loads and moderately high temperatures. The rule thus has to be improved with the aim of decreasing its conservatisms in case of higher temperatures and/or higher pressures (for GEN IV Gas Cooled Reactors). Studies were realized to improve the rule on the following points: - the position of the temperature dwell time in the cycle : the current rule always considers that the dwell time is located at one of the extremes of the cycle, what can be very conservative in some cases, - the symmetrisation effect of the stabilized cycle, - the case where the primary loads vary during the cycle, - the primary and secondary stresses combination during the temperature dwell time for the evaluation of the stress relaxation. These works are based on viscoelastoplastic calculations of stabilized cycles and the new proposals are applied on different tests. The consequences on creep-fatigue damage evaluation can be very significant.


Author(s):  
O. Ancelet ◽  
Ph. Matheron

Mod 9Cr-1Mo steel (T91) is a candidate material for steam generator of SFR (Sodium Fast Reactors). In order to validate this choice, it is necessary, firstly to verify that it is able to withstand the planned environmental and operating conditions, and secondly to check if it is covered by the existing design codes, concerning its procurement, fabrication, welding, examination methods and mechanical design rules. A large R&D program on mod 9Cr-1Mo steel has been undertaken at CEA in order to characterize the behavior of this material and of its welded junctions. In this program, the role of the Laboratory for structural Integrity and Standards (LISN) is to develop high temperature defect assessment procedures under fatigue and creep loadings. In this frame, complementary studies are conducted in order to validate the existing methods (developed for the fast reactors) and to get new experimental data on Mod 9Cr-1Mo steel. In particular, some new experiments are conducted on specimen with a weld joint and compared with classical experiments on base metal specimen. These results associated with finite element modeling allow to propose a weld joint coefficient at 550°C for the Mod9Cr 1Mo steel.


2019 ◽  
pp. 191-214
Author(s):  
B. Z. Margolin ◽  
A. G. Gulenko ◽  
A. A. Buchatsky ◽  
A. A. Sorokin ◽  
O. Yu. Vilensky ◽  
...  

The present paper overviews the basic principles of Russian Standard elaborated by authors for justification of lifetime prolongation of BN-600 fast reactor (FR) and for justification of design lifetime of BN-800 and BN-1200 FR. These principles are based on the analysis of the main mechanisms of material embrittlement and damage under service and formulation of the limit conditions for different components of FR of BN type.


Author(s):  
Hsuan-Tsung Sean Hsieh ◽  
Ning Li ◽  
Yitung Chen ◽  
Kenny Kwan ◽  
Jen-Yuan Huang ◽  
...  

In the development of advanced fast reactors, materials and coolant/material interactions pose a critical barrier for higher temperature and longer core life designs. For advanced burner reactors (sodium cooled), experience has shown that the qualified structural materials and fuel cladding severely limits the economic performance. In other liquid metal cooled reactor concepts, advanced materials and better understanding and control of coolant and materials interactions are necessary for realizing the potentials. Researches from universities, national laboratories and related industrial participants have been continuously generating invaluable data and knowledge about materials and their interactions with coolants in the past few decades. Under the consideration of cost and time constraints, the paradigm of designing and implementing a successful Gen IV Nuclear Energy Systems can be shifted and updated via the integration of information and internet technologies. Such efforts can be better visualized by implementing collective (centralized or distributed) data storages to serve the community with organized material data sets. Material property data provided by MatWeb.com and the ongoing development of web-based GEN IV material handbook are few examples. From system design perspective, sodium-cooled fast reactor (SFR) proposed in the GEN IV system have been significantly developed. According to the GEN IV ten-year program plan, current R&D work will be pointed to demonstration of the design and safety characteristics, and design optimization. All of those activities follow the path of data generation, analysis, knowledge discovery and finally decision making and implementation. We are proposing to create a modularized web-based information system with models to systematically catalog existing data and guide the new development and testing to acquire new data. Technically speaking, information retrieval and knowledge discovery tools will be implemented for researchers with both information lookup options from material database and technology/development gap analysis from intelligent agent and reporting components. The goal of the system is not only to provide another database, but also to create a sharable and expandable platform-free, location-free online system for research institutes and industrial partners.


Author(s):  
M. Isaacson ◽  
M.L. Collins ◽  
M. Listvan

Over the past five years it has become evident that radiation damage provides the fundamental limit to the study of blomolecular structure by electron microscopy. In some special cases structural determinations at very low doses can be achieved through superposition techniques to study periodic (Unwin & Henderson, 1975) and nonperiodic (Saxton & Frank, 1977) specimens. In addition, protection methods such as glucose embedding (Unwin & Henderson, 1975) and maintenance of specimen hydration at low temperatures (Taylor & Glaeser, 1976) have also shown promise. Despite these successes, the basic nature of radiation damage in the electron microscope is far from clear. In general we cannot predict exactly how different structures will behave during electron Irradiation at high dose rates. Moreover, with the rapid rise of analytical electron microscopy over the last few years, nvicroscopists are becoming concerned with questions of compositional as well as structural integrity. It is important to measure changes in elemental composition arising from atom migration in or loss from the specimen as a result of electron bombardment.


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