Abstract

An integrated experimental and computational approach was developed to determine the plastic strain at fracture and to investigate the fracture energy of as-received and hydrided unirradiated Zircaloy-4 nuclear cladding tubes in the hoop direction at room temperature from ring compression testing (RCT). This work builds on previous methods in the literature that were developed to obtain the mechanical properties of nuclear cladding before fracture (Young’s modulus, yield stress, and strain-hardening parameters) from experimental RCT results and extends the characterization of this material class to include material failure properties. A ductile damage approach was developed and implemented in a validated finite element model to predict material failure, evaluate fracture energy, and quantify the plastic strain at fracture initiation. The hydrogen content of the Zircaloy-4 specimens was varied up to 610 wppm when the failure became brittle. As expected, increasing hydrogen content caused embrittlement of the Zircaloy-4 samples tested and the plastic strain at fracture and fracture energy to decrease

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