Title: Diapositive 1
1MEGAPIE Structural Materials Is there a risk of
failure?
J. Henry J. Konys For the X7-X10 Working Group
A. Almazouzi, T. Auger, Y. Dai, A. Gessi, H.
Glasbrenner, D. Gorse, F. Gröschel, I. Serre, A.
Terlain, J-B. Vogt
2MEGAPIE target The structural Materials
- 3 main materials were used in the MEGAPIE Target
- ? AlMg3 Lower Target Enclosure (LTE)
- T91 Lower Liquid Metal Container (LLMC) Beam
Window (BW) - 316L Stainless Steel Other parts such as the
Flow Guide Tube (FGT), By-Pass Flow Tube (BFT),
Fill and Drain Tube (FDT), Central Rod (CR),
Electro-Magnetic Pump, Heat exchanger
- Reasons for the choice of T91 for LLMC
- Very good thermomechanical properties (High
strength, low thermal expansion, high thermal
conductivity) - Excellent radiation resistance (at temperatures
gt 380C) - Low Ni content a priori good compatibility
with Pb-Bi
3The AlMg3 Lower Target Enclosure
- AlMg3 safety Hulls have been used for all SINQ
solid targets - ? Two were operated without problem up to more
than 10 Ah proton charge - Two others reached more than 6 Ah
The MEGAPIE AlMg3 LTE should not cause any
problem up to the end of the MEGAPIE operation
(expected proton charge 3 Ah)
Dai et al. JNM 343 (2005) 184
Beam window of the safety hull of SINQ Target-3
after cutting of discs at 3 postions
4The 316L Internal Structures
- These structures will experience no or moderate
irradiation (peak damage for a 3Ah proton charge
about 2.5 dpa) Given these irradiation
condition and the operating temperature range,
316 L will retain significant, ductility,
toughness and fatigue resistance - low corrosion rate, evaluated to be in the
relevant T range at low oxygen content/in flowing
LBE 0.1 mm/year - Low cycle fatigue life of 316L in LBE little
affected compared to results in air - Maximum stresses in the irradiated parts
relatively low (Von Mises eq stress about 60-70
MPa)
Saito et al. JNM 343 (2005) 253
The 316L components should safely operate up to
the maximum envisaged proton charge
Kalkhof et al. JNM 318 (2003) 143
5The Lower Liquid Metal Enclosure and Beam Window
- The LLME and in particular the Beam Window is
the most critical component - Multiple causes of damage/ acting
synergistically - corrosion/erosion by flowing LBE
- Irradiation embrittlement by energetic protons
neutrons - Liquid Metal Embrittlement (LME)/Liquid Metal
Accelerated damage (LMAD) - Cyclic Mechanical/Thermal loadings
6Irradiation-induced embrittlement of T91
irradiated in a spallation environment
- Irradiation in a spallation environment induces
a large DBTT shift at low temperature - However the Ductile to-Brittle Transition
temperature was evaluated to remain below the hot
stand-by temperature (230C) for doses lt 8-9 dpa
DBTT shift/dpa for martensitic steels irradiated
in a spallation environment Dai et al. JNM 356
(2006) 308
7Risk of Brittle failure
Toughness for T91 irradiated in a spallation
environment (Dai Maloy)
Stress Intensity factor for a large surface crack
as a function of crack depth
- The toughness remains significant up to 8-9 dpa
at 250C - Due to the low stress value in the window, the K
value far below the retained toughness even for a
large deep surface crack
Brittle failure risk (due to irradiation effects
alone) is very low
8What about LME/LMAD?
- T91 was shown to be prone to LME if there is
plastic deformation and intimate contact with the
liquid metal - Such conditions not encountered at the beginning
of operation - absence of plastic deformation T91 has high
strength, increased by the irradiation, and
stresses are low - presence of native oxide which should prevent
wetting during preconditionning/start up
procedure - LISOR results have shown that an oxide layer
(i.e. additional protection against wetting)
should form on the surface irradiated by the
proton beam - However, the oxygen content in Pb-Bi is expected
to slowly decrease during operation (unknown
rate) - Dissolution of the protective oxide layer ?
- Intergranular attack ? It is a concern since it
was shown that intergranular attack can play the
role of crack initiation sites which may
propagate by cyclic loading in LBE leading to a
reduction of the low cycle fatigue life.
9Formation of a fatigue crack on the window
surface?
- The general trend is that the reduction in
fatigue life in LBE /air disappears at low
stress/strain values, which is the case for the
MEGAPIE window - If a small crack were to form, its growth rate
would be very small due to the low ?K range
Very low probability that a deep crack (a few
tenths of mm depth) would form on the window
inner surface
J-B. Vogt et al. Eurocorr 2005
10Risk of Brittle failure in LBE
Toughness for T91 irradiated in a spallation
environment (Dai Maloy)
- The toughness of T91 irradiated to 9 dpa was
determined at 250C in LBE (Dai et al.)
In LBE _at_ 250C
- Even if a deep surface crack were to form, the
LEFM analysis still predicts that the risk of
brittle fracture is negligible
Stress Intensity factor for a large surface crack
as a function of crack depth
11CONCLUSION
A Failure of the Lower Liquid Metal Container is
very unlikely within the service time of the
target (maximum proton charge ? 3 Ah) under
normal operating conditions