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Assessment of a Stress-Free Temperature Model for Residual Stresses in Surface Cladding of a Reactor Pressure Vessel...

by Bennett R Bass, Paul T Williams, Terry L Dickson, Hilda B Klasky
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Proceedings of the ASME 2017 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference
Publication Date
Conference Name
Proceedings of the ASME 2017 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference
Conference Location
Waikoloa, Hawaii, United States of America
Conference Date
-

This paper describes further results from an ongoing study of a simplified engineering model that is intended to account for effects of clad residual stresses on the propensity for initiation of preexisting inner-surface flaws in a commercial nuclear reactor pressure vessel (RPV). The deposition of stainless steel clad¬ding during fabrication of an RPV generates residual stresses in the cladding and the heat affected zone of the under¬lying base metal. In addition to residual stress, thermal strains are gen¬erated by the differential thermal expansion (DTE) of the cladding and base material due to temperature changes during normal operation. A simplified model used in the ORNL-devel¬oped FAVOR probabilistic fracture mechanics (PFM) code accounts for the clad residual stress by incorporating a stress-free temperature (SFT) approach. At the stress-free temperature (Ts-free), the model assumes there is no thermal strain, i.e., the thermal expansion stresses and clad residual stresses offset each other. For normal cool-down transients applied to the RPV, interactions of the latter stresses generate additional crack driving forces on shallow, internal surface-breaking flaws near the clad/base metal interface; those flaws tend to dominate the RPV failure probability computed by FAVOR. In a previous report from this study (PVP2015-45086), finite element analysis was used to compare the stresses and stress-intensity factors (SIF) during a cool-down transient for two cases: (1) the existing SFT model of FAVOR, and (2) directly applied RPV clad residual stress (CRS) distribution obtained from empirical (hole-drilling) measurements made at room temperature on an RPV that was never put into service. However, those analyses were limited in scope and focused on a single flaw orientation.
In this updated study, effects of CRS on the SIF histories computed for both circumferential and axial flaw orientations subjected to a cool-down transient were determined from an extended set of finite element analyses. Specifically, com-parisons were made between results from applying CRS experi-mental data to ABAQUS two-dimensional, inner-surface flaw models and those generated by the FAVOR SFT model. It is demonstrated that the FAVOR-recommended SFT value of 488 °F produces conservatively high values of SIF relative to the use of CRS profiles in the ABAQUS models. For the vessel and flaw geometry and transient under study, the circumferential flaw (360° continuous) required a decrease of SFT down to 390 °F to match the CRS SIF histories. For the infinite axial flaw model, a decrease down to 300 °F matched the CRS SIF hist¬ories. Future plans are described to develop more general conclusions regarding the FAVOR model.