Abstract
Due to aging nuclear power plants there is an increasing need for methods to evaluate the integrity of components and structures of nuclear engineering. During power plant operation, nuclear materials are exposed to the effects of temperature, corrosion and cyclic loading. These lead to microstructural changes resulting in material degradation, which can be detected by suitable nondestructive testing (NDT) methods. Fatigue testing setups for ambient temperature, distilled water and 300 °C were designed to represent relevant environmental conditions and instrumented with in-situ measurements of temperature, electric, micromagnetic and electrochemical NDT parameters. Constant amplitude and strain increase tests with specimens of metastable austenitic stainless steel AISI 347 (X6CrNiNb18-10, 1.4550) typically used for pipe components were conducted in total strain control. Data obtained were employed in short-time evaluation procedure StrainLife to generate fatigue life data. To establish an understanding between microstructure evolution and NDT data, scanning electron microscopic methods such as electron backscatter diffraction and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy were used. Electrochemical data yields fatigue life results as good as conventionally used parameters like stress and strain. These findings could enable usage of presented parameters for mobile or even online testing systems, since accessibility depending on application case can be much improved.
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