Abstract

The 9Cr steels EUROFER and F82H-mod are the candidate materials for future fusion reactors. The extension of the operation limits including temperature, strength and toughness are still the scope of ongoing research. In a pulsed reactor operation, fatigue lifetime is one of the major properties for the steels. While the oxide dispersion strengthened EUROFER-ODS variant showed significant improvements in this area, the production costs and availability of large quantities of materials drastically limits its applications.In the present study, different surface nitriding treatments of EUROFER972 have been performed and the impact on microstructure, dynamic fracture toughness and high temperature fatigue has been analysed. Four different states of EUROFER including different heat treatments, nitriding of the surface and the ODS variant are tested and compared in this work.Low cycle fatigue tests show the improvements after certain treatments. Charpy impact tests and microstructural investigation by scanning electron microscopy and analytical transmission electron microscopy are also performed to compare the materials against the reference (EUROFER97).While conventional gas nitriding showed no beneficial effect on the material, the Hard-Inox-P treatment showed a significant improvement in the cycles to failure while retaining an acceptable toughness. Microstructural investigations showed the presence of very small chromium- and nitrogen-rich precipitates in the area close to the surface.

Highlights

  • Advanced breeding concepts demand for an extension of the temperature range from 350 °C – 550 °C (conventional EUROFER97) to 350 °C – 650 °C

  • Advanced breeding concepts demand for an extension of the temperature range from 350 °C – 550 °C to 350 °C – 650 °C. These requirements lead to the fabrication of the oxide dispersion strengthened (ODS) variant of EUROFER97 [7]

  • The same behavior is shown by the two ODS steels, which again show an increase in life time compared to the Hard-Inox-P treated samples for low loads

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Summary

Introduction

Advanced breeding concepts demand for an extension of the temperature range from 350 °C – 550 °C (conventional EUROFER97) to 350 °C – 650 °C. Different surface nitriding treatments of EUROFER972 have been performed and the impact on microstructure, dynamic fracture toughness and high temperature fatigue has been analysed. Four different states of EUROFER including different heat treatments, nitriding of the surface and the ODS variant are tested and compared in this work.

Results
Conclusion
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