American Nuclear Society
Home

Home / Publications / Journals / Nuclear Technology / Volume 104 / Number 1

Postirradiation Recovery of a Reactor Pressure Vessel Steel Investigated by Positron Annihilation and Microhardness Measurements

Ramiro Pareja, Nieves De Diego, Rosa Maria De La Cruz, Javier Del Río

Nuclear Technology / Volume 104 / Number 1 / October 1993 / Pages 52-63

Technical Paper / Material / dx.doi.org/10.13182/NT93-A34869

Positron lifetime and microhardness measurements have been performed on untreated, thermal-aged, neutron-irradiated, and postirradiation-annealed samples of reactor pressure vessel steels with the purpose of investigating the mechanisms of irradiation-induced hardening and recovery of the mechanical properties in these materials. The positron lifetime experiments have not revealed any evidence of the formation of a significant concentration of voids or vacancy clusters in samples irradiated at ∼290°C with fluences ≤2.71 × 1023 n/m2 (E > 1 MeV), but they suggest a dislocation annealing induced by the irradiation. Isochronal annealing experiments with neutron-irradiated samples show a simultaneous recovery in their positron lifetime and microhardness at ∼340°C. From the microhardness measurements, the yield strength of the irradiated material has been estimated. The results appear to be consistent with a model of hardening due to irradiation-induced dissolution of precipitates with formation of small metastable precipitates after postirradiation aging and recovery induced by the disappearance of these metastable precipitates.