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U.S. Department of Energy
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Reconstitution technique for surveillance programs

Conference ·
OSTI ID:277827
;  [1]
  1. Nuclear Research Inst. Rez plc (Czech Republic)

Surveillance programs of reactor pressure vessel materials play very important role in reactor pressure vessel lifetime assessment. Unfortunately, most of them were designed and manufactured many years ago when knowledge about radiation damage as well of fracture mechanics was substantially nonadequate to present requirements. Reconstitution techniques are very effective methods for obtaining necessary data from irradiated and previously tested surveillance specimens. Electron beam welding technique was chosen for reconstitution of irradiated surveillance specimens from WWER-440 reactor pressure vessels. This method was chosen as an effective one as practically no machining is necessary after welding as specimen dimensions and forms are fully maintained. Paper describes the reconstitution method and results obtained from its validation--time dependent temperature in the vicinity of the specimen notch to prove that this method does not affect irradiation damage in reconstituted specimens. Paper also gives results from first tests of re-assessed surveillance program of WWER-440 RPV: comparison of transition temperature shifts from original Charpy V-notch specimens with transition temperature shifts from reconstituted precracked Charpy specimens.

OSTI ID:
277827
Report Number(s):
CONF-960306--; ISBN 0-7918-1226-X
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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