Abstract
In this work, we study the effect of high-temperature thermomechanical treatment (HTMT) with deformation in the austenite region on the microstructure, tensile properties, impact toughness, and fracture features of advanced low-activation 12% chromium ferritic-martensitic reactor steel EK-181. HTMT more significantly modifies the steel structural-phase state than the traditional heat treatment (THT). As a result of HTMT, the hierarchically organized structure of steel is refined. The forming grains and subgrains are elongated in the rolling direction and flattened in the rolling plane (so-called pancake structure) and have a high density of dislocations pinned by stable nanosized particles of the MX type. This microstructure provides a simultaneous increase, relative to THT, in the yield strength and impact toughness of steel EK-181 and does not practically change its ductile-brittle transition temperature. The most important reasons for the increase in impact toughness are a decrease in the effective grain size of steel (martensite blocks and ferrite grains) and the appearance of a crack-arrester type delamination perpendicular to the main crack propagation direction. This causes branching of the main crack and an increase in the absorbed impact energy.
Funder
Russian Science Foundation
Subject
General Materials Science,Metals and Alloys
Reference40 articles.
1. Odette, G.R., and Zinkle, S.J. (2019). Structural Alloys for Nuclear Energy Applications, Elsevier.
2. Ferritic/martensitic steels for next-generation reactors;J. Nucl. Mater.,2007
3. Microstructure and mechanical properties of low-activated ferritic-martensitic steel EK-181 (RUSFER-EK-181);Perspect. Mater.,2006
4. Structural materials for fusion power reactors—The RF R&D activities;Nucl. Fusion,2007
5. Effect of thermo-mechanical treatment on tensile properties of reduced activation ferritic-martensitic steel;Mater. Sci. Eng. A,2018
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献