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The Effect of Neutron Irradiation Damage on the Properties of Grade NBG-10 Graphite...

by Timothy D Burchell, Lance L Snead
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Journal of Nuclear Materials
Publication Date
Page Numbers
18 to 27
Volume
371
Issue
1-3

Nuclear Block Graphite-10 (NBG-10) is a medium-grain, near-isotropic graphite manufactured by SGL Carbon Company at their plant in Chedde, France. NBG-10 graphite was developed as a candidate core structural material for the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor (PBMR) currently being designed in South Africa, and for prismatic reactor concepts being developed in the USA and Europe. NBG-10 is one of several graphites included in the US-DOE Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR) program. Thirty-six NBG-10 graphite flexure bars have been successfully irradiated in a series of eighteen HFIR PTT capsules at ORNL. The capsule irradiation temperatures were 294�25, 360�25 and 691�25�C. The peak doses attained were 4.93, 6.67, and 6.69 x 1025 n/m2 [E>0.1 MeV] at ~294, ~360, and ~691�C, respectively. The high temperature irradiation volume and dimensional change behavior, and flexure strength and elastic modulus changes of NBG-10 were similar to other extruded, near-isotropic grades, such as H-451, which has been irradiated previously at ORNL. The low temperature (~294�C) irradiation volume and dimensional change behavior was also as expected for extruded graphites, i.e., exhibiting low dose swelling prior to shrinkage. This behavior was attributed to the relaxation of internal stress arising from the graphite manufacturing process and specimen machining. While the data reported here do not represent a complete database for NBG-10 graphite, they give a measure of confidence that the current generation of nuclear graphites will behave in a familiar and well understood manner.