NSUF 24-4900: APT study of HT-9 to evaluate the effect of neutron irradiation temperature, alloying elements and heat treatment

Ferritic-martensitic steels are being considered as candidate structural materials for fast reactors and advanced LWR due to their excellent resistance to radiation-induced void swelling, microstructural stability, thermal conductivity, and superior irradiation creep properties. HT-9 was selected as the fuel clad and duct material in FFTF and EBR-II, and it is still the first-choice candidate core material for several advanced reactor concepts due to its service performance and the relatively large database on it. Currently, commercial nuclear power companies such as TerraPower has rejuvenated the manufacturing of HT-9.

To address the issue of low-temperature (~425°C) neutron irradiation hardening and embrittlement, it is necessary to conduct systematic investigations on the mechanical behavior and microstructure of HT-9 with slight variations in chemical composition and heat treatment over a wide range of doses and temperatures. Three HT-9 heats (ORNL, LANL and EBR II) with variations in manufacturing process, chemical composition and heat treatment were neutron irradiated (~4 dpa) in the ATR at different temperatures (241-469C). Our team recently won RTE award (#1687) and completed microhardness and tensile testing of these HT-9 variants. Maximum impact of this work will be obtained by performing TEM and APT characterization of these samples to correlate the measured hardening with microstructural features.

We propose to employ the APT technique to enhance the understanding of the underlying mechanisms for α′ and Ni/Mn/Si precipitation evolution in HT-9 upon neutron irradiation. Currently, efforts are ongoing to perform APT study (#1) at CAES under a funded RTE project#4629 on irradiated (~4 dpa) HT-9 as a function of irradiation temperature (241°C, 388°C and 452°C). The objective of this RTE proposal (follow-up study, #2) is to perform APT study on irradiated HT-9 (EBR II variant) that has a significant variation in heat treatment, alloying elements (Ni, Mn, Si and W) and mechanical properties, when compared to the HT-9 heat (ORNL) being studied now (RTE project#4629). Since both alloys were irradiated together in the ATR, the overall objective is to evaluate the formation of α′ and Ni/Mn/Si precipitation in neutron irradiated (~4 dpa) HT-9 as a function of irradiation temperature (241°C, 291°C, 388°C and 452°C), heat treatment and alloying elements (Ni, Mn, Si, W).

To achieve this objective, we will utilize APT to determine the size, number density, and chemical composition of the α′ and Ni/Mn/Si precipitates. To understand the contributions to irradiation hardening, the dispersed barrier-hardening model will be employed to determine the changes in yield strength induced by each type of obstacles, and then compare the measured hardening (tensile and microhardness data from funded RTE) with microstructure-deduced hardening contributions obtained from APT (proposed RTE; α’ and G phases) and TEM studies (ongoing work). By doing this work, our team can contribute to filling the gap in the literature on understanding the irradiation effects on HT-9 and F-M steels in general. The project performance (sample preparation, APT characterization, and analysis) is expected to take place during June - Dec 2024 and will result in one conference presentation and one journal article publication.

추가 정보

필드
Award Announced Date 2024-05-28T16:52:49.67
Awarded Institution Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Facility Tech Lead Stuart Maloy, Yaqiao Wu
Irradiation Facility
PI Ramprashad Prabhakaran
PI Email [email protected]
Project Type RTE
RTE Number None