Advantages and Limitations of Martensitic Steels For Fusion
Advantages and Limitations of Martensitic Steels For Fusion
Advantages and Limitations of Martensitic Steels For Fusion
Introduction
Chapter 2 provides some information on fission and fusion systems for which the high-chromium ferritic/martensitic steels are to be used. In fast reactors, ferritic/martensitic
steels are considered primarily in the fuel subassembly as
fuel pin cladding and wrapper material. The use of these
steels as structural materials for a fusion reactor first wall
and blanket structure provides a much bigger challenge, and
considerable work on determining a range of properties has
been carried out for this application. Much of the work on irradiated steels for both fast fission and fusion applications
has been on steels irradiated in fast reactors. Because in recent years the development of fast fission reactors has been
de-emphasized while work on the fusion application continued, much of the emphasis of the discussion in this book is
on the fusion application. However, most of the information
obtained in the fusion program applies for fast fission applications, because most neutron irradiations were carried out
in fission reactors, and mostly in fast reactors.
This book will show that fission and fusion reactors present a difficult challenge for the materials community, but it
will also demonstrate that considerable progress has been
made. The following two sections of this chapter will provide
a brief introduction to some of the ways ferritic/martensitic
steels will help meet the challenge.
Most of the information on ferritic/martensitic steels for nuclear applications comes from studies on commercial Cr-Mo
steels, primarily 912% Cr, 12% Mo, 0.10.2% C with small
amounts of V, Nb, W, Ni, etc. (Compositions throughout the
book will be in wt% unless otherwise stated.) These were the
ferritic steels considered first for fast breeder fission reactors
in the early 1970s and then in the late 1970s for fusion applications. The steels became of interest because of their
swelling resistance compared to austenitic stainless steels,
which were the primary candidates for both applications up
to that time [1,2].
In recent years, most of the developmental studies on the
ferritic/martensitic steels for nuclear applications have been
for fusion, and much of the discussion in this book will be on
that application. Since the mid-1980s, the fusion materials
programs in Japan, the European Union, and the USA have
been developing ferritic/martensitic steels that would lessen
the environmental impact of the irradiated and activated
steel after the service lifetime of a fusion reactor. As discussed throughout this book, these new reduced-activation
ferritic/martensitic steels display the same general behavior
as the conventional steels, but there are quantitative differences. Often, some of the properties of the reduced-activation
steels are better than those of the conventional steels.
The amount of data available for reduced-activation steels
either in the unirradiated or irradiated condition is not as
extensive as for the conventional steels, since many of the
conventional steels are used for elevated-temperature applications to 550 to 600C in the power-generation and petrochemical industries. As a result, the metallurgical characteristics and mechanical and physical properties of the
conventional steels are reasonably well understood, and comprehensive mechanical properties compilations are available.
Fusion applications require information on some mechanical properties that differ from those normally measured
(e.g., thermal fatigue). However, from the wealth of data
available, indications are that a range of ferritic/martensitic
steels have properties that make them viable candidates for
fusion applications to 550 to 600C. The maximum operating
temperature will be determined by the creep properties and,
under some circumstances, by the compatibility with the operating media (i.e., water, liquid lithium, liquid Pb-Li eutectic, etc.) of the fusion power plant. The major difference in
the fission and fusion environments and the environments of
most other applications is the neutron flux of the nuclear applications. Fast fission and fusion applications differ in this
respecta much higher-energy neutron flux is produced by
fusion neutrons.
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION 3
level after activation [16]. A low-activation material would
negate the consequences of a loss of coolant accident or any
other incident that could cause an accidental release of radioactive debris. Such a material would also allow for
hands-on maintenance of the plant, instead of the much
more complicated and expensive remote maintenance required with a radioactive plant.
At present, no low-activation structural materials as defined above exist. A recent study (discussed in detail in
Chapter 2) [17] indicates that the activation of SiC, which
has often been labeled low activation, is considerably
lower than a V-5Cr-5Ti alloy and OPTIFER, a Cr-W ferritic/martensitic steel developed for reduced activation in
the European Union. Indeed, according to the study [17],
the activity of SiC about 100 y after shutdown is higher than
that of V-5Cr-5Ti and OPTIFER. Therefore, safety will need
to be engineered into a fusion structure constructed from a
vanadium alloy, a SiC/SiC composite, or a reduced-activation ferritic steel.
Environmental effects will be produced from the disposal
of fusion reactor components when they are replaced during
operation or following the decommissioning of the plant
[16]. This radioactive waste will have to be disposed of in a
safe manner harmless to the environment. Depending on the
elements present, the decay of induced radioactivity in a conventional ferritic/martensitic steel can take thousands of
years. Such highly radioactive nuclear waste is disposed of by
deep geological storage. To improve this situation, programs
in Europe, Japan, the Soviet Union, and the USA were started
in the mid-1980s to develop low-activation or reduced-activation ferritic steels [1826] with the objective of shallow
land burial or recycle of the material after its service lifetime
and after some suitable cooling-off (radioactivity decay) period, usually assumed to be 100 years. In the USA, a Department of Energy Panel used U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission 10 CFR Part 61 guidelines to suggest that wastes at
least meet the criteria for shallow land burial [16]. The 10
CFR Part 61 guidelines were set up for storage and disposal
of low-level nuclear wastes from fission reactors, and it is not
known how they might apply to fusion wastes generated
many years in the future.
It should be noted that the term low activation is
often used interchangeably with reduced activation to
describe the vanadium alloys, SiC/SiC composites, and
ferritic/martensitic steels developed to ease radioactive
disposal, even though they do not meet the criteria for low
activation as described above (i.e., a material that does not
activate or activates to a very low level). As presently defined,
a reduced- or low-activation steel is one that will be disposed
of by shallow land burial (according to the 10CFR Part 61
guidelines). As an alternative, recycling has been suggested
[18]. The composition of such a steel needs to be adjusted to
contain only elements that form radioactive products that
decay rapidly (in tens or hundreds of years rather than
thousands of years) to low levels. Calculations were made to
determine which elements must be replaced in conventional
Cr-Mo steels to obtain a rapid decay of induced radioactivity
levels after irradiation in a fusion reactor [16]. Such
calculations indicated that the common alloying elements
used in steels that must be eliminated or minimized include
Mo, Nb, Ni, Cu, and N [16].
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