Stress corrosion crack initiation testing with tapered specimens in high-temperature water–results of a collaborative research project

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Abstract

The applicability of an accelerated test technique using tapered tensile specimens for investigating the stress corrosion crack (SCC) initiation behaviour of structural materials in high-temperature water was assessed in the framework of a European collaborative research project (MICRIN–MItigation of CRack INitiation). The main advantage of using a tapered geometry is, that in a single test a stress gradient is obtained through the gauge length, and therefore a stress threshold for SCC initiation can be determined in a reasonable timeframe. This method was used to investigate two different materials that were known to be susceptible to SCC in light water reactor environment: a high-Si stainless steel and a Ni-base weld metal (Alloy 182). The results of the international test programme confirmed that the tapered specimen test methodology could be used to identify a SCC initiation stress threshold, albeit that significant scatter was present in the data.

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Bosch, R. W., Ritter, S., Herbst, M., Kilian, R., Burke, M. G., Duff, J., … Zajec, B. (2021). Stress corrosion crack initiation testing with tapered specimens in high-temperature water–results of a collaborative research project. Corrosion Engineering Science and Technology, 56(2), 103–118. https://doi.org/10.1080/1478422X.2020.1815460

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