• Title/Summary/Keyword: nuclear reactor vessel steel

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Open Die Forging of the Large Head Forgings for Reactor Vessel (원자로용 대형 헤드 단강품의 자유단조)

  • Kim D. Y.;Kim Y. D.;Kim D. K.
    • Transactions of Materials Processing
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    • v.14 no.6 s.78
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    • pp.565-569
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    • 2005
  • Reactor Vessel is one of the most important structural parts of nuclear power plant. It is manufactured by various steel forgings such as shell, head and transition ring. Head forgings have been made by open die forging process. After steel melting and ingot making, open die forging has been carried out to get a good quality which means high soundness and homogeniety of the steel forgings by using high capacity hydraulic press. This paper introduced the open die forging process and manufacturing experience of large head forgings which can be used for the reactor vessel of 1,000MW nuclear power plant.

Development Trend of the Large Head Forgings for Reactor Vessel (원자로용 대형 헤드 단강품의 개발동향)

  • Kim D. K.;Kim D. Y.;Kim Y. D.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Technology of Plasticity Conference
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    • 2005.06a
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    • pp.131-139
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    • 2005
  • Reactor Vessel is one of the most important structural part of nuclear power plant. It is manufactured by various steel forgings such as shell, head and transition ring. Head forgings has been made by open die forging process. After steel melting and ingot making, open die forging has been carried out to get a good quality which means high soundness and homogeniety of the steel forgings by using high capacity hydraulic press. This paper introduced the development trend of the open die forging process and manufacturing experience of large head forgings which canl be used for the reactor vessel of nuclear power plant.

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Open Die Forging of the Large Head Forgings for Reactor Vessel (원자로용 대형 헤드 단강품의 자유단조)

  • Kim D. Y.;Kim Y. D.;Kim D. K.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Technology of Plasticity Conference
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    • 2005.05a
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    • pp.397-400
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    • 2005
  • Reactor Vessel is one of the most important structural part of nuclear power plant. It is manufactured by various steel forgings such as shell, head and transition ring. Head forgings has been made by open die forging process. After steel melting and ingot making, open die forging has been carried out to get a good quality which means high soundness and homogeniety of the steel forgings by using high capacity hydraulic press. This paper introduced the open die forging process and manufacturing experience of large head forgings which cant be used for the reactor vessel of 1,000MW nuclear power plant.

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Dynamic Boric Acid Corrosion of Low Alloy Steel for Reactor Pressure Vessel of PWR using Mockup Test (가압형 경수로 압력용기 재료인 저합금강의 동적 붕산 부식 실증 연구)

  • Kim, Sung-Woo;Kim, Hong-Pyo;Hwang, Seong-Sik
    • Corrosion Science and Technology
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.85-92
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    • 2013
  • This work is concerned with an evaluation of dynamic boric acid corrosion (BAC) of low alloy steel for reactor pressure vessel of a pressurized water reactor (PWR). Mockup test method was newly established to investigate dynamic BAC of the low alloy steel under various conditions simulating a primary water leakage incident. The average corrosion rate was measured from the weight loss of the low alloy steel specimen, and the maximum corrosion rate was obtained by the surface profilometry after the mockup test. The corrosion rates increased with the rise of the leakage rate of the primary water containing boric acid, and the presence of oxygen dissolved in the primary water also accelerated the corrosion. From the specimen surface analysis, it was found that typical flow-accelerated corrosion and jet-impingement occurred under two-phase fluid of water droplet and steam environment. The maximum corrosion rate was determined as 5.97 mm/year at the leakage rate of 20 cc/min of the primary water with a saturated content of oxygen within the range of experimental condition of this work.

EVALUATION OF GALVANIC CORROSION BEHAVIOR OF SA-508 LOW ALLOY STEEL AND TYPE 309L STAINLESS STEEL CLADDING OF REACTOR PRESSURE VESSEL UNDER SIMULATED PRIMARY WATER ENVIRONMENT

  • Kim, Sung-Woo;Kim, Dong-Jin;Kim, Hong-Pyo
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.44 no.7
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    • pp.773-780
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    • 2012
  • The article presented is concerned with an evaluation of the corrosion behavior of SA-508 low alloy steel (LAS) and Type 309L stainless steel (SS) cladding of a reactor pressure vessel under the simulated primary water chemistry of a pressurized water reactor (PWR). The uniform corrosion and galvanic corrosion rates of SA-508 LAS and Type 309L SS were measured in three different control conditions: power operation, shutdown, and power operation followed by shutdown. In all conditions, the dissimilar metal coupling of SA-508 LAS and Type 309L SS exhibited higher corrosion rates than the SA-508 base metal itself due to severe galvanic corrosion near the cladding interface, while the corrosion of Type 309L in the primary water environment was minimal. The galvanic corrosion rate of the SA-508 LAS and Type 309L SS couple measured under the simulated power operation condition was much lower than that measured in the simulated shutdown condition due to the formation of magnetite on the metal surface in a reducing environment. Based on the experimental results, the corrosion rate of SA-508 LAS clad with Type 309L SS was estimated as a function of operating cycle simulated for a typical PWR.

Treatment of Stainless Steel Cladding in Pressurized Thermal Shock Evaluation: Deterministic Analyses

  • Changheui Jang;Jeong, lll-Seok;Hong, Sung-Yull
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.33 no.2
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    • pp.132-144
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    • 2001
  • Fracture mechanics is one of the major areas of the pressurized thermal shock (PTS) evaluation. To evaluate the reactor pressure vessel integrity associated with PTS, PFM methodology demands precise calculation of temperature, stress, and stress intensity factor for the variety of PTS transients. However, the existence of stainless steel cladding, with different thermal, physical, and mechanical property, at the inner surface of reactor pressure vessel complicates the fracture mechanics analysis. In this paper, treatment schemes to evaluate stress and resulting stress intensity factor for RPV with stainless steel clad are introduced. For a reference transient, the effects of clad thermal conductivity and thermal expansion coefficients on deterministic fracture mechanics analysis are examined.

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Multiscale Modeling of Radiation Damage: Radiation Hardening of Pressure Vessel Steel

  • Kwon Junhyun;Kwon Sang Chul;Hong Jun-Hwa
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.229-236
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    • 2004
  • Radiation hardening is a multiscale phenomenon involving various processes over a wide range of time and length. We present a multiscale model for estimating the amount of radiation hardening in pressure vessel steel in the environment of a light water reactor. The model comprises two main parts: molecular dynamics (MD) simulation and a point defect cluster (PDC) model. The MD simulation was used to investigate the primary damage caused by displacement cascades. The PDC model mathematically formulates interactions between point defects and their clusters, which explains the evolution of microstructures. We then used a dislocation barrier model to calculate the hardening due to the PDCs. The key input for this multiscale model is a neutron spectrum at the inner surface of reactor pressure vessel steel of the Younggwang Nuclear Power Plant No.5. A combined calculation from the MD simulation and the PDC model provides a convenient tool for estimating the amount of radiation hardening.