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Theoretical models of threshold stress intensity factor and critical hydride length for delayed hydride cracking considering thermal stresses

  • Zhang, Jingyu (Institute of Mechanics and Computational Engineering, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Fudan University) ;
  • Zhu, Jiacheng (Institute of Mechanics and Computational Engineering, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Fudan University) ;
  • Ding, Shurong (Institute of Mechanics and Computational Engineering, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Fudan University) ;
  • Chen, Liang (Science and Technology on Reactor System Design Technology Laboratory, Nuclear Power Institution of China) ;
  • Li, Wenjie (Science and Technology on Reactor System Design Technology Laboratory, Nuclear Power Institution of China) ;
  • Pang, Hua (Science and Technology on Reactor System Design Technology Laboratory, Nuclear Power Institution of China)
  • Received : 2018.05.24
  • Accepted : 2018.07.06
  • Published : 2018.10.25

Abstract

Delayed hydride cracking (DHC) is an important failure mechanism for Zircaloy tubes in the demanding environment of nuclear reactors. The threshold stress intensity factor, $K_{IH}$, and critical hydride length, $l_C$, are important parameters to evaluate DHC. Theoretical models of them are developed for Zircaloy tubes undergoing non-homogenous temperature loading, with new stress distributions ahead of the crack tip and thermal stresses involved. A new stress distribution in the plastic zone ahead of the crack tip is proposed according to the fracture mechanics theory of second-order estimate of plastic zone size. The developed models with fewer fitting parameters are validated with the experimental results for $K_{IH}$ and $l_C$. The research results for radial cracking cases indicate that a better agreement for $K_{IH}$ can be achieved; the negative axial thermal stresses can lessen $K_{IH}$ and enlarge the critical hydride length, so its effect should be considered in the safety evaluation and constraint design for fuel rods; the critical hydride length $l_C$ changes slightly in a certain range of stress intensity factors, which interprets the phenomenon that the DHC velocity varies slowly in the steady crack growth stage. Besides, the sensitivity analysis of model parameters demonstrates that an increase in yield strength of zircaloy will result in a decrease in the critical hydride length $l_C$, and $K_{IH}$ will firstly decrease and then have a trend to increase with the yield strength of Zircaloy; higher fracture strength of hydrided zircaloy will lead to very high values of threshold stress intensity factor and critical hydride length at higher temperatures, which might be the main mechanism of crack arrest for some Zircaloy materials.

Keywords

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