Abstract

As part of the accelerator production of tritium and the spallation neutron source programs, the tensile properties of annealed 304L, 316LN and 316L stainless steel have been measured after proton and spallation neutron irradiation in the target region of the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE) accelerator (800 MeV, 1 mA) to a maximum dose of 12 dpa at temperatures ranging from 30 to 120 °C. In addition to the displacement damage produced from the irradiation, up to several thousand atomic parts per million (appm) of hydrogen and helium were produced in the irradiated material via spallation reactions. Results of tensile tests at temperatures from room temperature up to 164 °C show large increases in tensile yield strength, small increases in ultimate tensile strength, reductions in strain hardening capacity and reductions in ductility (uniform elongation and strain-to-necking) with increasing irradiation dose. A comparison of these data with the large database on tensile properties of type 316 stainless steel exposed to fission neutrons and tensile tested over the same temperature range show similar trends with regard to strength changes, but significantly larger reductions in ductility with irradiation dose were observed after irradiation in the spallation environment. The much higher amounts of helium and hydrogen produced through spallation in the LANSCE spectrum, compared to those developed in fission neutron irradiation environments at equivalent doses, may contribute to degradation in ductility.

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