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Journal Articles

Effect of grain refinement on transgranular stress corrosion cracking in SUS304L under boiling water reactor conditions

Hirota, Noriaki; Nakano, Hiroko; Takeda, Ryoma; Ide, Hiroshi; Tsuchiya, Kunihiko; Kobayashi, Yoshinao*

Material Science and Technology of Japan, 61(6), p.248 - 252, 2024/12

A comparative analysis of the 0.2 % yield stress in SUS304L stainless steel revealed that lower strain rates and higher temperatures significantly reduce yield stress. Grain refinement from 68.6 $$mu$$m to 0.59 $$mu$$m minimally impacted the rate of yield stress reduction at slower strain rates. However, finer grains showed a decrease in yield stress at reactor operating temperature compared to room temperature. In slow strain rate tests under conditions promoting intragranular stress corrosion cracking (SCC), SUS304L with grain sizes of 28.4 $$mu$$m or smaller exhibited similar fracture strains comparable to those at reactor operating temperatures, whereas coarse-grained SUS304L showed reduced fracture strain. Microstructural analysis showed that in smaller grains, over 87 % of the fracture surface was ductile. In particular, SUS304L with 0.59 $$mu$$m grains exhibited a higher presence of {111} / $$Sigma$$3 boundaries, which decreased with grain growth. These results indicate that grain refinement will suppress intragranular SCC by slowing corrosion progression through increased {111} / $$Sigma$$3 boundaries.

Oral presentation

Effect of grain refinement on dynamic strain aging in SUS304L stainless steel under high temperature pressurized water

Hirota, Noriaki; Kondo, Keietsu; Nakano, Hiroko; Fujita, Yoshitaka; Takeuchi, Tomoaki; Ide, Hiroshi; Tsuchiya, Kunihiko; Kobayashi, Yoshinao*

no journal, , 

Dynamic strain aging (DSA) has been identified in shrouds of boiling water reactors and recirculation system piping of pressurized water reactors in the nuclear field. This phenomenon increases the work hardening rate of the material and causes a reduction in ductility. Rodriguez reported that using stainless steel, this work hardening increases with grain refinement, making DSA more likely to occur. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effect of grain refinement on DSA in a high temperature pressurized water (HTPW) simulating nuclear reactor environment utilizing ultrafine grained SUS304L (UFGS). UFGS was heat treated to adjust the grain size from 0.59 $$mu$$m to 68.6 $$mu$$m, and Hall-Petch relationship for 0.2 % yield stress was arranged. The k values obtained in this study were almost the same as the reference values previously obtained for SUS304L. Regarding the effect of grain size on fracture strain, a comparison of fracture strain between tensile test under air and slow strain rate test (SSRT) under 598 K / 15 MPa at dissolved oxygen $$<$$ 1 ppb showed that the fracture strain was lower than that under air as the grain size became coarser. The micrograph after fracture in a HTPW showed that ductile fracture surfaces were observed for materials with grain sizes less than 28.4 $$mu$$m. However, when the grain size coarsened to 68.6 $$mu$$m, more than half of all fracture surfaces were brittle fractured. For the material with a grain size of 0.59 $$mu$$m under HTPW, many correspondence grain boundaries of {111}/$$Sigma$$3 boundaries were observed in the fracture cross-section of the sample. But these distributions were rarely observed when the grain size was coarsened to 68.6 $$mu$$m. Therefore, the suppression of crack propagation by DSA to the fine grains in a HTPW can be attributed to the relaxation of dislocation accumulation by the {111}/$$Sigma$$3 boundaries.

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