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Mechanical degradation of duplex SiC-fiber reinforced SiC matrix composite tubes under a controlled high-temperature steam environment

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Ceramics International
Publication Date
Page Numbers
25558 to 25567
Volume
50
Issue
14

This paper describes results from the mechanical evaluation of unirradiated SiC fiber–reinforced SiC matrix composite tubes under a controlled high-temperature steam environment. The experiments were aimed at identifying key material degradation behavior under environments relevant to loss-of-coolant accidents of light water reactors. Mechanical tests of the SiC composite tubes at 1000 °C under steam and inert environments were conducted using a unique test capability. The material tested was a duplex tube with a thick monolithic SiC layer on the outer surface. The tubes were subjected to preloading at ∼100 MPa in tension before exposure to high-temperature steam with up to 75 % of the preload at a constant displacement. In the presence of matrix cracks, the steam exposure caused embrittlement of the SiC composite tubes and failure at a stress level below the pretest stress. The material degradation was explained by a fiber oxidation model, which can be applied to various SiC cladding concepts. The embrittlement could be a limiting factor for using SiC cladding subjected to loss-of-coolant accident conditions.