Abstract

In a highly irradiated reactor pressure vessel (RPV), solute Mn, Ni, and Si (MNS) atoms gather to form nanometer-sized microstructures, generally called MNS clusters. MNS often gather with Cu-rich precipitates, which can form in RPVs following lower dose irradiation. In this study, surveillance specimens provided from four nuclear power plants in Japan were analyzed using three-dimensional atom probe tomography (APT), and the nature of the solute enrichment was carefully compared. When analyzing the chemical composition of each cluster, a clear negative correlation was found between Si and Cu in all materials, but conversely, Mn was likely present in clusters with a high Cu concentration. Moreover, in a boiling water reactor material with high Cu, the ratio of MNS was shown to be similar to that of the Γ2 phase [Mn (Ni, Si)2]. In pressurized water reactor materials with medium and low Cu, however, Ni and Si enrichment was demonstrated to be higher than the ratio of the expected intermetallic compounds; such as a Γ2 phase and a G phase [Mn6 Ni16 Si7]. Ni and Mn atoms, once enriched in a copper-rich region, may elute out, and form an intermetallic compound with Si atoms within the vicinity. Particularly in highly irradiated RPV materials, such a structure may tend to be decorated by irradiation-induced lattice defects with Si segregation.

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