THERMAL AGING OF CAST AUSTENITIC STAINLESS STEEL

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THERMAL AGING OF CAST AUSTENITIC STAINLESS STEEL EVOLUTION OF MICROSTRUCTURE AND MECHANICAL PROPERTIES Martin Bjurman

Transcript of THERMAL AGING OF CAST AUSTENITIC STAINLESS STEEL

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Slide title

36pt

Slide subtitle

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THERMAL AGING OF CAST AUSTENITIC STAINLESS STEEL

EVOLUTION OF MICROSTRUCTURE AND

MECHANICAL PROPERTIES

Martin Bjurman

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Materials technology

2Materials Technology

Active metals

laboratory

Transports

FA (fuel storage) Hot cell laboratory

Microscopy and analysis

Corrosion and water

chemistry lab

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Thermal aging of cast and welded stainless steels

• Large components are often often cast, e.g.

• Joints predominantly welded

• Cast and welded SS contain typically 5-15% d-ferrite

• Diffusion drives spinodal decomposition of the d-ferrite and precipitation of secondary phases

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Thermal ageing of cast and welded SS degrades the mechanical properties and is an important issue for long term operation

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Goal of the PhD-project

•Microstructurally and mechanically characterize long term in-service aged SS components

•Model macroscopic mechanical properties starting at a microstructural level

• Find a small specimen mechanical testing technique targeting relevant parameters for TA of reactor components

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Ferrite structure of cast and welded SS from R2

Weld (308L) Castings (CF8M)

• Two phases ferrite (~10%) and austeniteMicrostructural variations are large• Sizes• Shapes• compositions

ASTM E8 meeting San Antonio 4 May 16

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Ferrite decomposition quantified by APTAtomic maps of projected volumes (20x20x5 nm³ slices)

325°C for 74kh

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Chromium

Nickel

Manganese

Silicon

α'-phaseα-phaseG-phase

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• Ferrite

• Hardness increases

• More brittle

• Austenite minimally affected

=> Reduction of macroscopicalfracture toughness

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Mechanical properties aging behaviour

J kN

/m

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Constant strain rate tensile test

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Brittle fracture behaviourDuctile fracture behaviour

Strain localization and creep effect at phase boundary

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Mechanical properties – constant load tensile test

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Significant creep/relaxation measured already at low temperature

0,002

0,02

100 1000 10000 100000 1000000

Elongation

Time [s]

Creep at RT 92% of Rp0,2

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Summary

• Spinodal decomposition and G-phase formation is quantified by Atom Probe Tomography

• Mechanical properties change with aging and as expected are

• Ferrite hardnesses significantly increased

• Basic mechanical properties are changed, e.g. Fracture toughness and tensile properties

• But also

• Tensile strain rate dependence is affected by aging e.g. time dependent behaviour

• Creep/relaxation occurs already at low temperature

• Mechanical properties are sensitive to variations in microstructure and this is increased by aging of the ferrite as phase property mismatch increases

• Crystal plasticity modelling is used to target these parameters

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