Abstract

Reactor safety research aims at the safe operation of nuclear power plants during their service life. In this respect, Fraunhofer IZFP’s micromagnetic multiparameter, microstructure, and stress analysis (3MA) has already made a significant contribution to the understanding of different aging mechanisms of component materials and their characterization. The basis of 3MA is the fact that microstructure and mechanical stress determine both the mechanical and magnetic material behavior. The correlation between features of magnetic and mechanical material behavior enables the micromagnetic prediction of mechanical properties and stress, both of which can decisively influence the service life. The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi) funded this research, handling the mutually superimposed microstructural and stress-dependent influences, a substantial challenge, especially under practical conditions. This superposition leads to ambiguities in the micromagnetic features. The 3MA testing system has been extended by more sophisticated evaluation methods being able to cope with more complex datasets. Investigations dealing with the expansion of the feature extraction and machine learning methods have led to a more precise distinction between microstructural and stress-dependent influences. This approach provides the basis for future applications in reactor safety.

Highlights

  • Despite the German phase-out from nuclear energy, the highest safety requirements for the operation of nuclear power plants during their remaining service life are still vital for all countries

  • Material conditions are regularly checked with charpy tests, these tests can only be repeated in limited numbers [1]

  • The the main goal of this paper is the further distinction of microstructural mechanical stress influences theof3MA-X8 testing system

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the German phase-out from nuclear energy, the highest safety requirements for the operation of nuclear power plants during their remaining service life are still vital for all countries. The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi), as a funding body, supports research to maintain German expertise in the field of reactor safety. Material conditions are regularly checked with charpy tests, these tests can only be repeated in limited numbers [1]. To address this issue, non-destructive testing methods (ndt-methods) are used to detect changes in material conditions to disburden destructive testing methods [1].

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