Abstract

The main objective of this paper is to describe the effects of a long service exposure of the PWR fuel cladding tubes on their thermal-mechanical properties during and after a hypothetical LOCA transient. Within this prospect, specific studies have been performed: on one hand, thermal ramp tests under uniaxial stress loading on as-received, pre-hydrided and irradiated samples of Zy-4 and M5™, and on the other hand, mechanical tests after high temperature oxidation and quench on as-received and pre- hydrided Zy-4 and M5™. The main conclusions are: (1) In service, hydrogen pick-up impacts the thermal ramp behavior under uniaxial stress loading of cladding tubes upon the first phase of LOCA transient, and the effect of the irradiation defects can be ignored for the conditions tested. (2) As-received Zy-4 and M5™ achieve comparable post-quench mechanical behavior at 1000, 1100, and 1200°C for representative times of LOCA transient (1800 s). (3) Oxygen has the most important effect in embrittlement of as-received Zr alloys at 1100 and 1200°C. (4) Hydriding has no effect on the oxidation kinetics at 1200°C, but after quenching the hydrided materials become brittle at a lower weight gain than as-received materials; this embrittlement is due both to an intrinsic hydrogen-embrittlement effect and to the oxygen content increase resulting from the effect of hydrogen on its solubility in prior-Beta phase.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call