Title of article
A direct fracture toughness model for irradiated reactor vessel weld material based on reference temperature Original Research Article
Author/Authors
K.K Yoon، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
7
From page
253
To page
259
Abstract
The master curve method has opened a new means to acquire a directly measured material-specific fracture toughness curve based on testing a small number of replicate specimens. This process enables, for the first time, the construction of a material-specific fracture toughness curve for an irradiated material directly from fracture tests. Currently, only an inferred fracture model is available through a combination of the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code and a regulatory guide from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. This approach uses the fracture toughness curve of a generic, unirradiated reactor vessel steel that is shifted by a reference temperature (RTNDT) based on Charpy impact test data. The master curve method yields a key material parameter called reference temperature, T0, which indicates the location of the transition range fracture toughness curve on the temperature axis. When a small number of pre-cracked Charpy specimens were tested at several different fluence levels, the material specific reference temperatures can be shown as a function of fluence. One such model for the WF-70 weld material is presented in this paper. The irradiated specimen data and analyses from Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and the B&W Owners Group (B&WOG) are utilized for this model. This model is based on fracture toughness data, independent of Charpy impact energy levels, percent shear, and most importantly, material properties of unirradiated condition.
Journal title
Nuclear Engineering and Design Eslah
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
Nuclear Engineering and Design Eslah
Record number
889131
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