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Home / Publications / Journals / Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 21 / Number 2P2

The Origins of Tritium and Helium Effects on the Tensile Properties of Metals

S. L. Robinson, N. Y. C. Yang

Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 21 / Number 2P2 / March 1992 / Pages 856-860

Material; Storage and Processing / dx.doi.org/10.13182/FST92-A29856

The effects of internal tritium and helium on the tensile properties of two austenitic stainless steels and an iron-based superalloy have been studied. The materials tested were, forged 21Cr-6Ni-9Mn and 304L (tested in the annealed condition and two forged conditions), and a modified A-286 alloy. The accumulation of 3He from the radioactive decay of tritium caused an increase in the yield strength and a continuous decrease in the ductility in almost all materials tested. Increased 3He concentrations also caused a change in fracture mode from ductile rupture to predominantly intergranular fracture. The property changes resulted from 3He bubble-induced strengthening, which produced a change in deformation mode from long-range dislocation activity to deformation twinning. In the deformation-twinning mode, the 3He-accelerated fracture initiated at the intersections of deformation twins with grain boundaries. High-strength forged 304L was most resistant to 3He effects, owing to the redistribution of 3He on dislocations.