Effect of corrosion potential on the corrosion fatigue crack growth behaviour of low-alloy steels in high-temperature water |
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Authors: | S. Ritter H.P. Seifert |
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Affiliation: | Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), Nuclear Energy and Safety Research Department, Laboratory for Materials Behaviour, 5232 Villigen PSI, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | The low-frequency corrosion fatigue (CF) crack growth behaviour of different low-alloy reactor pressure vessel steels was characterized under simulated boiling water reactor conditions by cyclic fatigue tests with pre-cracked fracture mechanics specimens. The experiments were performed in the temperature range of 240-288 °C with different loading parameters at different electrochemical corrosion potentials (ECPs). Modern high-temperature water loops, on-line crack growth monitoring (DCPD) and fractographical analysis by SEM were used to quantify the cracking response. In this paper the effect of ECP on the CF crack growth behaviour is discussed and compared with the crack growth model of General Electric (GE). The ECP mainly affected the transition from fast (‘high-sulphur’) to slow (‘low-sulphur’) CF crack growth, which appeared as critical frequencies νcrit = f(ΔK, R, ECP) and ΔK-thresholds ΔKEAC = f(ν, R, ECP) in the cycle-based form and as a critical air fatigue crack growth rate da/dtAir,crit in the time-domain form. The critical crack growth rates, frequencies, and ΔKEAC-thresholds were shifted to lower values with increasing ECP. The CF crack growth rates of all materials were conservatively covered by the ‘high-sulphur’ CF line of the GE-model for all investigated temperatures and frequencies. Under most system conditions, the model seems to reasonably well predict the experimentally observed parameter trends. Only under highly oxidizing conditions (ECP ? 0 mVSHE) and slow strain rates/low loading frequencies the GE-model does not conservatively cover the experimentally gathered crack growth rate data. Based on the GE-model and the observed cracking behaviour a simple time-domain superposition-model could be used to develop improved reference CF crack growth curves for codes. |
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Keywords: | BWR, boiling water reactor C(T), compact tension (specimen) CF, corrosion fatigue CGR, crack growth rate CT, crack-tip ΔK, ΔK = KImax &minus KImin: total stress intensity factor range DCPD, direct current potential drop (method) DO, dissolved oxygen DSA, dynamic strain ageing EAC, environmentally-assisted cracking ECP, electrochemical corrosion potential Env, environment GE, general electric HWC, hydrogen water chemistry ν, loading frequency NWC, normal water chemistry PSI, Paul Scherrer Institute, Villigen, Switzerland R, load ratio RPV, reactor pressure vessel SCC, stress corrosion cracking SEM, scanning electron microscope SHE, standard hydrogen electrode |
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