Abstract

Tensile testing of small-size specimens has been widely used to evaluate the influence of neutron irradiation on the mechanical properties for structural materials of fusion reactors. In recent years, researchers have been trying to standardize small-size specimen tensile test method. In the present paper, we have investigated the influence of dimensional deviation and thickness non-uniformity on the tensile results of small-size specimen by both experiments and finite element simulations, based on one of the candidate structural materials of fusion reactor, i.e. CLF-1 steel. It was found that under the conditions of small grain size, small metallurgical defect size and suitable specimen preparation, the tensile results of SS-J3 specimen could be close to the results of large-size specimen. Slightly higher yield and ultimate strengths for small specimens may be caused by the surface treatment of the wheel grinding. The repeatability of ultimate strength was better than that of yield strength, and the repeatability of elongation was worse than that of strength. For tensile tests on eight SS-J3 specimens, the maximum difference in total elongation was about 3 %. With ±0.1 mm deviation of thickness and parallel width, the maximum variation in total elongation was about 1.8 %. The ductility properties were sensitive to specimen's thickness non-uniformity, the measured uniform and total elongations would obviously decrease even with 0.01 mm thickness non-uniformity.

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