Abstract

Welds in cast austenitic steels (CASS) are very challenging to inspect using the current American Society for Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code Section XI requirements. Supplement 9 of ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code Section XI, Appendix VIII is still in the course of preparation, requiring inspectors to use ASME Code Section XI, Appendix III, which provides prescriptive ultrasonic testing (UT) requirements that are significantly less rigorous than UT techniques that have been demonstrated under Appendix VIII. The inability of licensees to demonstrate that the welds in CASS components meet ASME Code requirements has been an ongoing area of concern for the NRC staff. The lack of a reliable inspection method for welds in CASS materials has led to hundreds of relief requests over the past four decades. While no degradation mechanism has been found in CASS components to date, there is no guarantee that a new degradation mechanism affecting CASS welds will not emerge as nuclear power plants go beyond forty years of operation. Licenses need qualified procedures and personnel for the inspection of welds in CASS materials in order to put licensees into compliance with ASME Code, meet federal regulations, reduce the number of needed relief requests, and ensure the structural integrity of their welds. Over the past decade there have been significant developments in nondestructive examination (NDE) technology. The use of encoded phased array techniques using low frequency ultrasound has been shown to be able to reliably find flaws greater than 30% through wall in CASS materials with a variety of microstructures. Additionally, an improved understanding of the fracture mechanics of CASS components is being developed that shows the flaw sizes that can be tolerated in CASS components. These advances in NDE techniques and fracture mechanics theory are converging on a path to allow for qualifications of procedures and personnel for the ultrasonic inspections of welds in CASS components. Recent developments in ASME Code includes Code Case N-824, which provides guidance on the examination of CASS materials based on the advances in NDE technology and an improved understanding of the NDE techniques capable of finding flaws in CASS components as well as Code Case N-838 for flaw tolerance evaluations of CASS piping components. Finally, work on ASME Code Section XI Supplement 9 is progressing, with several important issues still to be addressed. The NRC staff sees a clear path forward and is working to ensure that qualified inspections of welds in CASS materials will be possible in the future.

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