scholarly journals Physical Property Changes in Aging Plutonium Alloys

2008 ◽  
Vol 1104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandon W. Chung ◽  
Stephen R. Thompson ◽  
David S. Hiromoto

AbstractPlutonium, because of its self-irradiation by alpha decay, ages by means of lattice damage and helium in-growth. These integrated aging effects will result in microstructural and physical property changes. Because these effects would normally require decades to measure, studies are underway to asses the effects of extended aging on the physical properties of plutonium alloys by incorporating roughly 7.5 wt% of highly specific activity isotope 238Pu into the weapons-grade plutonium to accelerate the aging process. This paper presents updated results of self-irradiation effects on enriched and reference alloys measured from the immersion density, dilatometry, and mechanical tests. After nearly 90 equivalent years of aging, both the immersion density and dilatometry show that the enriched alloys at 35°C have decreased in density by ∼0.19 % and now exhibit a near linear density decrease, without void swelling. Both tensile and compression measurements show that the aging process continues to increase the strength of plutonium alloys.

2006 ◽  
Vol 986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandon W. Chung ◽  
Bill Choi ◽  
Cheng Saw ◽  
Stephen Thompson ◽  
Conrad Woods ◽  
...  

AbstractWe present changes in volume, immersion density, and tensile property observed from accelerated aged plutonium alloys. Accelerated alloys (or spiked alloys) are plutonium alloys enriched with approximately 7.5 weight percent of the faster-decaying 238Pu to accelerate the aging process by approximately 17 times the rate of unaged weapons-grade plutonium. After sixty equivalent years of aging on spiked alloys, the dilatometry shows the samples at 35°C have swelled in volume by 0.15 to 0.17 % and now exhibit a near linear volume increase due to helium in-growth. The immersion density of spiked alloys shows decrease in density, similar normalized volumetric changes (expansion) for spiked alloys. Tensile tests show increasing yield and engineering ultimate strength as spiked alloys are aged.


2010 ◽  
Vol 1264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandon W Chung ◽  
Kenneth Lema ◽  
David Hiromoto

AbstractThe alpha-decay of plutonium leads to the age-related change in physical properties. This paper presents updated results of age-related effects on enriched and reference alloys measured from immersion density, dilatometry, and mechanical tests. After nearly 100 equivalent years of aging, both the immersion density and dilatometry show that the enriched alloys are decreasing in density by less than 0.002% per year and now exhibit a near linear density decrease, without void swelling. The tensile tests show that the aging process increases the strength of plutonium alloys, followed by possible saturation past 70 equivalent years of age. The ultimate goal of this work is to develop capabilities to predict physical properties changed by aging effects.


2003 ◽  
Vol 802 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. W. Chung ◽  
S. R. Thompson ◽  
C. H. Woods ◽  
D. J. Hopkins ◽  
W. H. Gourdin ◽  
...  

Plutonium, because of its radioactive nature, ages from the “inside out” by means of self-irradiation damage and thus produces Frankel-type defects (vacancies and self-interstitial atoms) and defect clusters. The self-irradiation damage in Plutonium-239 occurs mainly by α-particle decay, where most of the damage comes from the U-235 recoil nucleus. The defects resulting from the residual lattice damage and helium in-growth could result in microstructural and physical property changes. Because these self-irradiation effects would normally require decades to measure, with a fraction (7.5 wt%) of Pu-238 is added to the reference plutonium alloy thus accelerating the aging process by approximately 18 times the normal rate. By monitoring the properties of the Pu-238 spiked alloy over a period of about 3.5 years, the properties of plutonium in storage can be projected for periods up to about 60 years. This paper presents density and volume changes observed from the immersion density and dilatometry measurements equivalent to aging the reference plutonium alloys to nine years.


Author(s):  
Vladimir Alexandrov ◽  
Boris Kudryashov ◽  
Kirill Ivanov ◽  
Viktor Vdovin

A short literary review on the super-sound impact upon different alloy aging is shown. The super-sound impact upon aging processes martensite alloys is considered. A super-sonic plant allowing increasing a super-sound impact upon martensite steel aging is developed. There are shown the investigation results of frequency and intensity of sound oscillation upon stress-strain property changes in aging processes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen Xupeng ◽  
Sun Zhuowen ◽  
Pang Jianyong

The main purpose of this study is to determine the metakaolin (MK) impacts on the concrete durability when the concrete is subjected to joint corrosion of SO42−,Mg2+ and, Cl−. Four groups of concrete test samples, which contained different MK contents, were designed and tested in order to see their physical property changes and macro-morphology differences during the cyclic corrosion process. And a series of approaches, including XRD, FTIR, SEM, and EDS, were applied to study the concrete phase composition changes and the micro-morphology features of all groups. According to the test results, when reaching 20 cycles, the concrete sample with 10% MK showed the best concrete physical properties; when reaching 120 cycles, the concrete with 5% MK content showed the best durability, produced similar amount of corrosion products to ordinary concrete, and presented relatively compacted micro-structure and small internal porosity. Mg2+ actually has a great impact on metakaolin. The corrosion product quantity increased significantly when MK admixture reached 15%. Due to the great number of produced M-S-H, the corrosive ions damaged the concrete for a second time, leading to serious aggregate peeling-off, powder surface of test samples, and porous micro-structure.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 1740 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiang ◽  
Oh ◽  
Kim ◽  
He ◽  
Oh

Leakage in below-grade concrete structures are repaired using various types of grout-injection materials, but the selection of optimal material types with a consideration of the environmental degradation factors are not conducted. Different degradation factors can act on the waterproofing membranes or grout-injection materials simultaneously. Especially in the early stages of installation, the injected grout materials in the cracks for leakage repair or for reforming damaged waterproofing layers are subject to complex forms of degradation factors. In such cases, physical property changes to the materials can reduce the waterproofing performance of the grout-injection materials. In this study, a technical evaluation regime is proposed for selecting the optimal repair material to be used in underground concrete structure leakage cracks. In this study, six environmental degradation factors (thermal stress, chemical corrosion, erosion due to ground water flow, hydrostatic pressure, substrate movement, and humidity on concrete surface) are identified. Corresponding evaluation methods based on the ISO TS 16774 test method series were used for each factor to assess the performance evaluation of four different types of grout-injection materials (acrylic resin, epoxy resin, polyurethane foam, and synthetic polymerized rubber gel). Based on the test results, a new comprehensive evaluation regime is presented that allows a quantitative performance comparison between each type of grout-injection material.


Diabetes ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. B. Sanjeevi ◽  
T. P. Lybrand ◽  
C. DeWeese ◽  
M. Landin-Olsson ◽  
I. Kockum ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-19
Author(s):  
D. Kocsis ◽  
R. Horváth ◽  
S. Manó ◽  
Z. A. Godó

Abstract The identification of property changes and damage in various structures is one of the major points in the engineering society. This work contains the method and results of a long-term aging process implemented by an experimental system. We applied a chemical and heat artificial aging test on metal and plastic pipes to indicate the degradation levels and results with suitable measuring instruments. During our measurements of aged pipes vibration tests were performed to get information about the changing of the vibration spreading properties of different materials. We were searching for information about the property changing of widely used pipe materials to estimate the rate of degradation and the service life of these instruments more accurately.


1985 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 305 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Shoji ◽  
C. C. Langway

The horizontal velocity of a thick ice sheet is maximum at the surface and decreases with increasing depth. The horizontal velocity profile at a given location differs from another location depending upon thein situstress and temperature conditions and the changing but distinctive physical and chemical character of the ice profile. The main property changes that influence the behavior of horizontal ice flow include chemical impurity concentration levels (both solid and dissolved components) and c-axis orientation. Shoji and Langway (1984) calculated the velocity profiles for both the Camp Century and Dye-3 Greeland location by taking into consideration possible enhancement factor variations over the profiles. This analysis was compared with the theoretical and experimental strain rate data obtained for laboratory ice at the same stress and temperature levels. This study indicated that the largest horizontal velocity component is the result of a highly enhanced shear deformation zone, a few hundred meters thick existing at the base of the ice sheet.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document