A review of stress corrosion cracking of austenitic stainless steels in PWR primary water

Ulla Ehrnstén, Peter l. Andresen, Zaiqing Que*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview Articlepeer-review

29 Citations (Scopus)
815 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Initial cases of stress corrosion cracking (SCC) in pressurized water reactors (PWRs) occurred mostly but not exclusively in stagnant areas like dead-legs, but recently more extensive IGSCC has occurred in normal free-flowing PWR primary water. Operational experience and laboratory data reveal that the main parameters in IGSCC include cold work and weld residual strain, oxygen, and residual and applied stress. Residual strain, which arises from manufacturing, surface grinding, and welding, should be limited by optimizing manufacturing procedures, minimizing alignment and fit-up stresses and using high-quality weld procedures. Preventing oxygen ingress in the make-up water should be pursued. Stresses created by thermal fluctuations (thermal mixing, low-leakage core operation, and start-ups) deserve more attention. Weld residual stress, fit-up stresses and local stresses from load follow must be maintained below the annealed yield stress. IGSCC should be considered in aging management and in-service inspection. Detection techniques capable of identifying IGSCC should be employed.
Original languageEnglish
Article number154815
JournalJournal of Nuclear Materials
Volume588
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024
MoE publication typeA2 Review article in a scientific journal

Funding

The work is funded by Finnish SAFER2028 (National Nuclear Safety and Waste Management Research Programme 2023-2028) LOAD project (Long-term Operation on Aging and environmental Degradation of nuclear reactor materials).

Keywords

  • PWR water
  • Stainless steel
  • Stress corrosion cracking

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