The effect of fuel burnup on the embrittlement of various cladding alloys was examined with laboratory tests conducted under conditions relevant to loss-of-coolant accidents (LOCAs). The cladding materials tested were Zircaloy-4, Zircaloy-2, ZIRLO, M5, and E110. Tests were performed with specimens sectioned from as-fabricated cladding, from prehydrided (surrogate for high-burnup) cladding, and from high-burnup fuel rods which had been irradiated in commercial reactors. The tests were designed to determine for each cladding material the ductile-to-brittle transition as a function of steam oxidation temperature, weight gain due to oxidation, hydrogen content, pre-transient cladding thickness, and pre-transient corrosion-layer thickness. For short, defueled cladding specimens oxidized at 1000-1200ºC, ring compression tests were performed to determine post-quench ductility at ≤135ºC. The effect of breakaway oxidation on embrittlement was also examined for short specimens oxidized at 800-1000ºC. Among other findings, embrittlement was found to be sensitive to fabrication processes -especially surface finish -but insensitive to alloy constituents for these dilute zirconium alloys used as cladding materials. It was also demonstrated that burnup effects on embrittlement are largely due to hydrogen that is absorbed in the cladding during normal operation. Some tests were also performed with longer, fueledand-pressurized cladding segments subjected to LOCA-relevant heating and cooling rates. Recommendations are given for types of tests that would identify LOCA conditions under which embrittlement would occur. ForewordFuel rod cladding is the first barrier for retention of fission products, and the structural integrity of the cladding ensures coolable core geometry. In the early 1990s, new data from foreign research programs showed degraded cladding behavior for high-burnup fuel compared with low-burnup fuel in tests designed to simulate postulated accidents. Interim actions were taken, but it became clear that extrapolation from a low-burnup data base needed to be reassessed more carefully for regulatory purposes.One of NRC's central regulations used in plant licensing deals with postulated loss-of-coolant accidents (LOCAs). A portion of that regulation in 10 CFR 50.46(b) specifies criteria that were derived from tests with unirradiated Zircaloy cladding, and these criteria limit the peak cladding temperature and the maximum cladding oxidation during the accident. These two limits are known as embrittlement criteria. Their purpose is to prevent cladding embrittlement during a LOCA, thus ensuring that the general core geometry will be maintained and be coolable.In the mid-1990s, NRC sponsored a cooperative research program at Argonne National Laboratory to reassess these limits for the possible effects of fuel burnup. The program's industry partners included the Electric Power Research Institute, Framatome ANP (now AREVA), Westinghouse, and Global Nuclear Fuel; in general, the industry partners were responsible fo...
The cochlear microphonic response was measured with differential electrodes from the first and third cochlear turns of normal guinea pigs and those treated with the ototoxic drug kanamycin. Histological controls showed that the outer hair cells in treated animals were missing over the basal half of the damaged cochleas, while the inner hair cells were intact. Measurements are consistent with the hypothesis that the potentials produced by inner hair cells are proportional to the velocity of the basilar membrane, whereas potentials generated by outer hair cells (which dominate the response of normal cochleas) are proportional displacement of the basilar membrane.
This compilation of thermophyical and mechanical properties of certain metallic fuels is meant to be used as a common source of data in work related to the Integral Fast Reactor. Because research on these properties is an ongoing effort, this handbook must be continuously updated in order to provide the best data set to all involved in the IFR program. The use of cornmon source of properties will facilitate comparison of various analyses of fuel behavior performed within the program. It also rvill facilitate uncovering gaps and weaknesses in the data base, and thus enable better direction for future work on experimental properties work.
ABSTRACT:The extended use of Zircaloy cladding in light water reactors degrades its mechanical properties by a combination of irradiation embrittlement, coolant-side oxidation, hydrogen pickup, and hydride formation. The hydrides are usually concentrated in the form of a dense layer or rim near the cooler outer surface of the cladding. Utilizing plane-strain ringstretch tests to approximate the loading path in a reactivity-initiated accident (RIA) transient, we examined the influence of a hydride rim on the fracture behavior of unirradiated Zircaloy-4 cladding at room temperature and 300°C. Failure is sensitive to hydride-rim thickness such that cladding tubes with a hydride-rim thickness >100 µm (≈700 wppm total hydrogen) exhibit brittle behavior, while those with a thickness <90 µm (≈600 wppm) remain ductile. The mechanism of failure is identified as strain-induced crack initiation within the hydride rim and failure within the uncracked ligament due to either a shear instability or damage-induced fracture. We also report some preliminary results of the uniaxial tensile behavior of low-Sn Zircaloy-4 cladding tubes in a cold-worked, stress-relieved condition in the transverse (hoop) direction at strain rates of 0.001/s and 0.2/s and temperatures of 26-400°C.
As part of an effort to investigate spent-fuel behavior during dry-cask storage, thermal creep tests are being performed with defueled Zircaloy-4 cladding segments from two pressurized water reactors — Surry at ≈36 GWd/MTU burnup and H. B. Robinson at ≈67 GWd/MTU burnup, with corresponding fast (E > 1 MeV) fluence levels of 7×1025 and 14×1025 n/m2. The Surry rods are particularly relevant because they were stored in an inert-atmosphere (He) cask for 15 years. The Robinson rods were received after reactor discharge and pool storage. Commensurate with their high burnup, the Robinson cladding has significant waterside corrosion and hydrogen uptake. Test results to-date indicate good creep ductility for both claddings in the 360–400°C and 160–250 MPa (hoop-stress) regime. Partial recovery of radiation hardening may have occurred during the long tests at 400°C, which led to improved creep ductility. Creep-rate sensitivity is significant for stress and even more so for temperature. The higher hydrogen content in the Robinson material appears to have no detrimental effect on creep behavior at the test temperature. One Robinson sample, which ruptured in the weld region at 205°C during cooling from 400°C under stress (190 MPa), precipitated all visible hydrides in the radial direction.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.