INCEFA-PLUS PROJECT: REVIEW OF THE TEST PROGRAMME AND MAIN RESULTS

1 Dundulis Gintautas
Co-authors:
1 Grybenas Albertas 2 Bruchhausen Matthias 3 Cicero Roman 4 Mottershead Kevin 5 Huotilainen Caitlin 6 Le Roux Jean-Christophe 7 Vankeerberghen Marc
Institutions:
1 Lithuanian Energy Institute, 44403 Kaunas, Lithuania, Gintautas.Dundulis@lei.lt
2 European Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), 1755 LE Petten, The Netherlands
3 Inesco Ingenieros, 39005 Santander Spain
4 Wood - Europe, Warrington, Cheshire WA3 6GA United Kingdom
5 VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd., Espoo, 02044 Finland
6 EDF - Recherche et Développement, 77818 Moret Sur Loing Cedex, France
7 SCK•CEN - Nuclear Materials Science Institute, 2400 Mol, Belgium
Conference:
29th International Conference on Metallurgy and Materials, Brno, Czech Republic, EU, May 20 - 22, 2020
Proceedings:
Proceedings 29th International Conference on Metallurgy and Materials
Pages:
410-415
ISBN:
978-80-87294-97-0
ISSN:
2694-9296
Published:
27th July 2020
Proceedings of the conference were published in Web of Science and Scopus.
Metrics:
1205 views / 383 downloads
Abstract

INCEFA-PLUS (INcreasing Safety in NPPs by Covering gaps in Environmental Fatigue Assessment) project characterized environmentally assisted fatigue of stainless steels in light water reactor environments. During this project more than 200 fatigue tests have been carried out in different laboratories across Europe in air and water environment. Most tests were performed on a single batch of 304L, an austenitic stainless steel alloys employed in NPPs. The tests addressed the effects of strain amplitude, hold time periods, material roughness and mean strain/stress on fatigue endurance. A limited number of tests was carried out on other batches of 304L and on X6 CrNiTi 18 10, a Ti stabilised steel used in VVERs. Additionally, activities on the effects of mean stress under strain control, testing at reduced environmental fatigue correction factor Fen, and different applications of hold time as well as biaxial fatigue tests have been carried out. The data obtained has been collected and standardised in an online environmental fatigue database MatDB.

Keywords: Experimental testing fatigue, environment fatigue, steel 304L

© This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Scroll to Top