Abstract

This paper reports on the first successful nonlinear ultrasonic measurement on highly irradiated specimens in a hot cell environment. The specimens are ANSI 304 stainless steel specimens for which the microstructure characterization and ultrasonic velocity measurement have been previously conducted. The critical part of this research is the development of an automatic fixture device that can facilitate repeatable loading and unloading to place the contact ultrasonic transducers on and off of the specimen. The key step to achieve high measurement repeatability is a careful adjustment of the support-spring constants such that the contact force at the interface between the transducer face and specimen surface is as uniform and constant as possible. The longitudinal ultrasonic velocities, which are obtained as a by-product of the nonlinear ultrasonic measurements, show a level of random variation in terms of (max-min)/average (%) below 0.2%, and the velocity distributions and magnitudes are in good agreement with those from the previous work. The ultrasonic nonlinearity parameters show the level of random variation below 4.7%, which is extremely low, considering that the measurements are conducted in a hot cell environment. The nonlinearity parameters also show a strong dependence on the measurement location in a particular specimen with respect to the radiation source, demonstrating a possible inhomogeneous microstructure evolution in these 12.7 mm thick specimens. This research demonstrates the feasibility of making nonlinear ultrasonic measurement on highly radioactive materials and/or in a highly radioactive environment using the device and procedure developed.

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