Abstract

Abstract In the event of a severe core meltdown accident in a pressurised water reactor (PWR), core material can relocate into the lower head of the vessel resulting in significant thermal and pressure loads being imposed on the vessel. In the event of reactor pressure vessel (RPV) failure there is the possibility of core material being released towards the containment. On the basis of the loading conditions and the temperature distribution, the determination of the mode, timing, and size of lower head failure is of prime importance in the assessment of core melt accidents. This is because they define the initial conditions for ex-vessel events such as core/basemat interactions, fuel/coolant interactions, and direct containment heating. When lower head failure occurs (i) the understanding of the mechanism of lower head creep deformation; (ii) breach stability and its kinetic of propagation leading to the failure; (iii) and developing predictive modelling capabilities to better assess the consequences of ex-vessel processes, are of equal importance. The objective of this paper is to present an original characterization programme of vessel steel tearing properties by carrying out high temperature tearing tests on Compact Tension (CT) specimens. The influence of metallurgical composition on the kinetics of tearing is investigated as previous work on different RPV steels has shown a possible loss of ductility at high temperatures depending on the initial chemical composition of the vessel material. Small changes in the composition can lead to different types of rupture behaviour at high temperatures. The experimental programme has been conducted on various French RPV 16MND5 steels for temperatures ranging from 900 °C to 1100 °C. Comparisons between the tests performed on these various 16MND5 steels show that this approach is appropriate to characterize the difference in ductility observed at high temperatures. The aim of this experimental study is also to contribute to the definition of a tearing criterion by identifying, on the basis of CT results, the related material parameters at temperatures representative of the real severe accident conditions. This experimental campaign has been carried out in partnership with IRSN in the framework of a research programme whose purpose is to complete the mechanical properties database of 16MND5 steel and to model tearing failure in French RPV lower head vessels under severe conditions ( Koundy et al., 2008 ).

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