2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2009.03.003
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Compatibility of FBR materials with sodium

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Cited by 51 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…2) is similar to the distribution of the rate of corrosion of the walls of such a channel (Fig. 3) of steel 316 obtained in [5,6] and fi ts the data of [3,4], in accordance with which the rate of formation of deposits in the cold region of a sodium loop comprises 30-100% of the rate of corrosion of its walls in the hot region.…”
supporting
confidence: 87%
“…2) is similar to the distribution of the rate of corrosion of the walls of such a channel (Fig. 3) of steel 316 obtained in [5,6] and fi ts the data of [3,4], in accordance with which the rate of formation of deposits in the cold region of a sodium loop comprises 30-100% of the rate of corrosion of its walls in the hot region.…”
supporting
confidence: 87%
“…In the present investigation, the reduction in the slope under flowing sodium environment with increasing temperature is less significant compared to that under air environment. As, flowing sodium environment has little effect on the creep behaviour of 316 stainless steel [25], the influence of creep in reducing fatigue life is the same in both environments. Oxidation plays a major role in reducing the fatigue life under air environment.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…From this experimental fact, it follows that the effect of high-temperature neutron irradiation would not be a main cause. The high-temperature flowing sodium corrosion tests of ferritic steels, including ODS ferritic steels, produced mass transfer of elements evinced in such behaviors as surface Cr depletion, Ni enrichment, and decarburization; however, it led to neither the peculiar microstructure change nor indications of its occurrence [15,18,19]. Therefore, the mass transfer produced by sodium flow also would not be a main cause.…”
Section: Selection Of Key Factor Leading To the Peculiar Irradiation mentioning
confidence: 99%