Fracture toughness characterization in the lower transition of neutron irradiated Eurofer97 steel
This research investigated the evolution of tensile, hardness, and fracture properties of Eurofer97 tempered martensitic steel following neutron irradiation. The irradiation-hardening was measured with Vickers hardness tests on broken parts of sub-sized compact tension specimens as well as with tensile tests deformed at room temperature. The fracture toughness was measured with pre-cracked sub-sized 0.18T compact tension specimens. Two specimen sets were irradiated up to a nominal dose of about 0.35 dpa at two different temperatures, 423 and 623 K, in the experimental reactor at AEKI-KFKI in Budapest. The median fracture toughness-temperature curve K(T) was characterized in the lower to middle transition region for each irradiation condition using the master-curve method. The irradiation-induced temperature shifts of K(T) were determined by calculating the reference temperature T-0 at which the median toughness is 100 MPa m(1/2). A significantly larger shift was determined for Eurofer97 irradiated at 423 K than at 623 K. Indeed, an upper shift of 98 K was found for the 423 K irradiation while only 50 K was measured for the 623 K. On the one hand, that observation reflects the difference in the irradiation-hardening following those two irradiation temperatures. On the other hand, when compared with other published data, the Delta T-0 shift at 623 K irradiation was found to be greater than expected for the corresponding irradiation-hardening. Thus, it was suggested that non-hardening embrittlement mechanisms start to operate around 623 K. (C) 2013 Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved.
2013
442
1-3
S58
S61
REVIEWED