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Experimental Study on Surrogate Nuclear Fuel Rods under Reversed Cyclic Bending...

by Hong Wang, Jy-an Wang
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Fatigue and Fracture Test Planning, Test Data Acquisitions and Analysis, ASTM STP 1598
Publication Date
Page Numbers
19 to 36
Volume
1598
Publisher Location
West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Conference Name
Symposium on Fatigue and Fracture Test Planning, Test Data Acquisitions and Analysis
Conference Location
San Antonio, Texas, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
ASTM E8
Conference Date
-

The mechanical behavior of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) rods under reversed cyclic bending or bending fatigue must be understood to evaluate their vibration integrity in a transportation environment. This is especially important for high-burnup fuels (>45 GWd/MTU), which have the potential for increased structural damage. It has been demonstrated that the bending fatigue of SNF rods can be effectively studied using surrogate rods. In this investigation, surrogate rods made of stainless steel (SS) 304 cladding and aluminum oxide pellets were tested under load or moment control at a variety of amplitude levels at 5 Hz using the Cyclic Integrated Reversible-Bending Fatigue Tester developed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The behavior of the rods was further characterized using flexural rigidity and hysteresis data, and fractography was performed on the failed rods.
The proposed surrogate rods captured many of the characteristics of deformation and failure mode observed in SNF, including the linear-to-nonlinear deformation transition and large residual curvature in static tests, PPI and PCMI failure mechanisms, and large variation in the initial structural condition. Rod degradation was measured and characterized by measuring the flexural rigidity; the degradation of the rigidity depended on both the moment amplitude applied and the initial structural condition of the rods. It was also shown that a cracking initiation site can be located on the internal surface or the external surface of cladding. Finally, fatigue damage to the bending rods can be described in terms of flexural rigidity, and the fatigue life of rods can be predicted once damage model parameters are properly evaluated. The developed experimental approach, test protocol, and analysis method can be used to study the vibration integrity of SNF rods in the future.