Journal of NuclearMaterials122 & 123 (i984) 777-782 No&Holland, Amsterdam
AN ASSESSMENT Oi I-?XRTEI:SITIC STEELS FOR LOW ACTIVATION STATUS
Thomas LECHTENBERG* GA Technologies,
P. 0.
Inc.,
Box 85608,
San Diego,
Cal lfornla
92136
An assessment of 12$Cr-martens1 tic steels has shown they may meet the requl rements for surf ace The guldellnes for maxlmum allowable residual waste disposal and can be melted and f abrl cated. impurity levels were calculated and must be adhered to and will impact the design philosophy for A deslgn equatfon has been wrltten for allowable amounts of fmpurltles any alloy composition. such that the producer and alloy design team can trade-off certain strengthening addltfons for lmpur I ti es. Introduce unacceptabl e I evel s of others when those pure-element alloy addftions Currently, the levels of Impurities for several dffferent lots of starting material are belng reviewed, and lmpllcatlons to alloy coinpositions assessed.
1,
require
INTRODUCTION The
Deve I opment
Alloy
Performance 9-12
Cr
flrst
task
class
wall/
Is of
the
materlals
In
the
mater
I al s”‘.
ADIP
program
single probable goals
can
on physical
power
reactor
the
primery of the
%Ince
at
shown
to
special removal
mater
IaI
authors
rlsk
specie gratefully
results be
quickly
resultlng an
fran
support
0022-3 115/84/$03.00 0 Elsevier Science Publishers B.V. (North-Holland Physics Publishing Division)
they
could
The
relative
of
the
costs
safety
of
the
surface
are
cost
easl ly,
at three the
of
$200-600
as
classes
of
Impurities
of
other Fusfon
decay
such
that waste.
of
surface
cannot packaging
they cubic
have foot
surface
for
waste,
al ternatfve, Energy
all few
surface
for
per
major
that
dlsposal
but
of
While
enough
monitoring,
only
of
advantages
geologic
waste
Is a relatively
weak
that
geologic
because
levels
I
Al I
deep,
disposal.
dfsposed
without
Office
for
of al
meet1 ng
such
radionuclldes
or
be
not
actfvate
it
are
disposal.
require
and
(l&R)
classes
whl ch
others
will
activate,
vs.
for
al I
qual Ify
daughter
estimated
will the
the
reactor
geologic
surface
enough
burylng
the
DE-AT03-76ET51011.
the
four
C,
many generations
will
have
and
and
elements
est fmated
for
B
would
for
disposal
this:
release
accident
acknowledge
to
activated (2)
service,
during
a f uslon
required the
for
high
tat lored
will
has
Ire
not and
constituent too
elements
of
of
malnten-
address
and
water
materials
wquld
disposal
with
and materials
results
I fght
A,
utll
disposal,
no
that
f ran
of
after
they
the
I ong-term
alloys
costs
remote
lOCFR61,
disposal, must
conventlonal
the
material
will
storage
surface
fcatlons.”
alloys
safeguards
safety
activated
time
satisfy
neutrons
three
wastes
of
this
the
Cl asses
these
reactor
properties
are
and
I mater-
goals
Increased
concerns
guldeline,
waste.
consider-
. . . the
appl
waste
reccm-
fuslon
structural
There
(1)
potential
of
conventlonal
the
has
These
management
Currently,
actlvatlon
and
developing
and
with all
I vate3.
*The
be
I nteractlon
machlne
of
state2:
focused
fusion The
act
the
f usf on env lronment are
cause
one of
Furthermore,
mechanl cal for
machfnes
development
alloy
low
and (3) tncorporating
Issues.
the
DOE has
1vat I on of structura
remaln
In
for
and
equf pment.
waste
In
Recently by
ante
the
appllcatlons
constituted
fusion “Act
should
for
requirements
mended that,
evaluating
blankets.
Panel
assessed
ations
steels
breeding
LOW Actfvatlon
lal
currently
mttfgatfon,
developing
Irradiation
for
under
be and been any whl le
geologic contract
disposal, per
I lkely
will
cubic The
of
the
the
release
of
most
to
fol lowing f fres,
I lthl
or
through
urn or
other
materfal
material.
Unlverslty
oxide
of
less
unless
that
the
Is
point
of
concern
and
point
at
thls the
A
material
temperatures
blanket
the
objective HT-9,
low
acttvatlon
Activation would of
of
Panel
due
to
its a
for
a
I
this are
the
producing
was to qual lfylng
deflned
In
low
was assessed
the
actlvatlon
I
assess for
the
Low
three
goals
and contact feaslbllity
alloys
by lnteractlon
wlth
of
of
thls
two
producers
model for
perform
steels
thls
recently Th Is
study
Is
was
reactor
represents
studled
fusion
rltlc In
steel. this
the
study
the
selected one of
reactors
the
MARS because
the
most
whose
The b I anket is
blanket
June
compared
to
In
those
MARS.
conf
blanket
to
95s Fe 1422+51
952 Fe 1422t5f "20
26.24 cm 7;;7&Lgbt7.1$
Hz0
HT-9 "t-9
1,s.z cm 1.078 N/A
1.,333 1.37
1.374 86.16 13.39 0.43
transport
obtain
but Ion of
code,
the
the
group on the
neutron
Is
and
B4C,
i guratlon of
ANISN,
DLC-37
flux
The
the
analysis
a
multlgroup
cross
25
were
employed using
calculation
their
Into
Then,
dlstrlbutlon
elements weight
dls-
blanket trans-
structures
calculation
and
the
group
I I brary8,
chemical
energy
In
ordfnates
col I apsed
calculation.
radioactlvlty
used
and
was per-
and
f I ux
The discrete
radloactivlty
fer-
spatial
and 21 gamma-ray
the
MARS
calcuiatlon
neutron
I lbrary,
transport
extenslvefy
1982 verslon
Jl;i ~P!Hl51
90
_-
The neutron
projec+.
blanket
f-t.USta)
90 28.24 73.72 LIPb+'I.lj HT-9 58.96 cm a52 LIPb+lS% HT-9
91.84 a.2
sectlon
chosen
HT-9/LI17Pb83
for
The
shown
(a)A 41 cm shield conposed of layers cf Fe 1422, Pb. cooled by rater "(1s Included lo the neutronlcs calculetlon.
port
calculations reactor/blanket
The fusion
developed blanket
activation
a specific
was selected.
are
0.7297
and ref I ector.
to
ferritlc
energy
f I uxes.
115.2 cm
s ~~~~~~ Aeftectw Shlsld
formed
al lays.
In order
the
type
ANALYTICAL
for
also
28 a
Total Blanket and reflector thickness Trltlwn breeding rstlo Pb (n.2111 Blanket energy multlpil~ti~n
trl 2.
group
was
structured
obtain
This Study
s 61.1 Concentratlo"
qua1 If icatlon
dlsposal,
Furthermore
ANISN7
steel to
calculation
hlgh
Its
Thls
waste
also
calculation
code
ferrltic design
and for
transport
dependent
frcmn
reported
volatile
work
report.
surface
those
as
probably
unoxldlzed
of
1t meet two of the
maintenance.
of
to
status
require
safety,
this
wel I
as an alloying
formation
relative
cm.
ferritlc-structured
ordinates
blanket
posl tlon
Blanket
The
115.2
equally
and
of
a total
resulting
appl les
design
neutron
oxI de5.
alloy,
of
radloactlvlty
class
discrete
performed
Table
design.
has
blankets.
results a
and
thickness the
design
whole
detailed
uslng
and
of
July
the
MARS blanket design
reflector
blanket
Lll7Pb83
forms
the
Manganese
a major
meltlng
material
Is voiatlie
Both struc-
the
to
of own
the
I ikely the
melting
pressure
the
Wlsconsln blanket
and
Ll17Pb83
Its
temperature
blanket
to
breeder-material
has
of
a thick
from
Is
I ization
decay4.
material.
element
off-site
which
is
The Implication
mechani sm for
radloactlve
the
I Ize
below
of
deflned.
volatl
The higher
a material.
structural
well
material
ral se the
volatl
less
important
due to
scenarios
vapor
$200,000
I oss of cool ant to a structure
by
self-heating
surface
to
imp1 fcations
be
activated
well
is
activated
cons1 dsred
will
safety
actlvatlon
highly
closer
It
issue
Currently,
tural
be
foot.
materials
of
/An assessment of martensitic steels
T. Lechtmberg
778
as
an
neutron based for
the
input
code,
the group
to
the
DKRg
the
was performed. selected fractions
for In
the poten-
T. Lechtenberg
tlal
fusion
listed
In
topic
blanket Table
sectlon
data
tanta
exists
due to
could
not
the
reaction
not
at
be
maximum niobium al loy,
since
activity
in
for
Included
may
al I
of
this
time.
the
g3Nb
the
level
low
isotopes
a mixture an
the
of
isotope
concentration
This
In
the
quite
to
based
such
reduced the
of lmpurltles
for class "A" waste
MaxImum Concentration appm. IO Yr.
Danlnant Nuclld
1,220 2,550 200 70 190
Co 60 Fe 55 NI 63 MO 93 Nb 93m v 49 Co 45 w 161 Co 60 Ni 63 c 14 Hn 54 Al 26 Co 60 zr 93 Nb 92 Nb 94 Be 10
:I w CU N Hn : Nb
s
achieve
mlnlmum
to
as
low
certain
and
all
transmute
Ides must
activation conventional alloying
and molybdenum
levels
that
of
HT-91,
as nickel
matrix
be
to
in
must
be
Impurities
In
unacceptable
reduced
proposed
lOCFR61
In
waste.
For
fran
MO
to
cannot
to
strl
ngent
regulation
waste
II
concentrations
NI
waste
Concentration
on$ modif lcations
(such
elements
g4Nb
are
order
alloys
I lmltatlons
Element
the
ratios
regulation
Maximum Allowable
materials
ngent.
In HT-9 to qualify
In
In the
radium.
sum of
RESULTS
radionucl
MaxImum elemental
than
the
one.
3.1.
g4Nb
potential
on
3.
the
speclfylng
waste
TMLE
other
isotopes,
concentration
exceed
elementa
(n,y)
In the
requirements
of
Also,
for
concentration
ele-
e.g.,
library.
important
alpha-sanlttlng For
119
steels
I I brary,
these
In the
of martensitic
iso-
cross-
some el events,
presence
data
is
for
actlvatlon
DKR cross-section
be reported
cross-section reactlon
for
are
occurrlng
assumed
no neutron
In the
I urn,
activity
strl
were
Because
alloys
Naturally
II.
abundances
ments.
structural
/An assessment
of
HT-9
would wt-%
A Ilst
(HT-9)
material
the
proposed
fol lowlng
must
I Ike
than
380
appm,
1O22 atoms/mole
estimated
given
of
impurities
not
exceed
or and
be 55.2
a 12Cr-1Mo
Table
II.
The
introduced
the
atlon
to In
in
“lmpurltyk
Calcu-
wal I material
radlonuclldes
regul
l’Ak
products
maximum allowable
less
weight
should
the
be
Is
class
and N163.
the
on 8 x
of
amounts
alloying by
to
atcmlc
gms).
Fe55,
that
(based
for
transmutation
in a first
have
alloy
qual Ify
~060,
shown
nickel
0.040
total
5;: 60.000 270,000 63,000 13,000 260.000 0.1 49,000
are
have
amount
to
examp I e,
nfckel
lations
an
5.250
order
amount
lOCFR61, equation
by
dictated e.g.
that
requirement
be met:
MaXImum ConCentrations calculated as If each were the only InpurIfy In the matsrlal
l
c Maximum mined for
fran a
the
For
I lnes
the for
Isotopes value
beta
radiation, was
used
signlflcant for
for
U-235
the
In the
value
for
radiation, Cl/cm3)
x~nl/Kj’l
i
was
where
gul de-
Cl/cm31 wlth
beta-emitting
gamma (0.4
classiflca-
(0.4
isotopes
deter-
10CF6110
waste I isted
g0Sr
for
were
regulation
not
emitting
no gana
value
proposed segregated
uCl/cm3) wlth
concentrations
low-level
t/on.
used
Isotope
Xl
Is
residual
the
atorn
element
1.
parts q
per
1 Is
mll I ion
the
was
actlvlty,
and
Ilttle
or
actlvlty
according
to
10CFR61.
This
Cs-137
(10
fraction
of
allowable
radioactivity
says
the
Ki
is
the
isotopes
due
and
the
fraction
of
that
element
used
for
summed over
al I
expected
to
any
Impurity
allowable
element
times (In
appm)
lmpur II-y
of
specific radioequatlon
the Is
atomic to
elements,
be
780
T. Lechtenberg f An assessment o~~~rtells~tic steels
TABLE III
E I ement Ni
Co60 Fe55 N163 Mo92 Nb93m Co60 Ni63 Cl4 Co60 Zr93 Nb92 Nb94 Mn54 Al26 Bet 0
MO CU
k Nb
Nn
Al B %atcuiations and
that
These
summation
data
Thus,
are
can
be
specie
be
less
in Table
III.
written
that
by
Co.
But
two
orders
as
canpared
those
the
For
n/K
of
factor
radionucl
Ides to
Is
that
In
Included.
SO,
Co60
(one
or
on I y
So,
to
example,
and
Cu and Co
while
for
N
in
the
would
for
Cl ass
X~+Z.45~10-~ X&,+10
XAl+1.6~10-~
Class
6,
be A
the
equation
.8x10-3
3.2
The
Feaslbi
of
1
should
canposition
if
these
materials
was determined
to as
from
be -
reduce
must
which
residuals
in
increase
the
sary
between
more
chromium
maintain
Is
the
to
met,
available
virgin content
because,
molybdenum
content
to
It
as
adding in
niobium
content
So,
order
to
further
deslrable
other
which
to
a trade-off tungsten
fran
The
compensate.
is made may have
Nb
to such
tungsten such
for
strengtheners
be added
but
speclficatlons
important
other
be
residual
be
residuals
the
possible,
as tungsten ore
that
the
that
are
with
their
This
activation control
probably
and
and
example, low
could
analyzed
I ned.
4.
1
may
above
the
may be necesand,
for
example,
mlnlmize
impurity
additions
mechanlcal
yet
also
propertles.
DISCUSSION Other
production simliar
qual Ity
ccmposltions
be
determ
Low Activation
two
It
materials
of at
concerning
careful
required
speclflc
tallorlng
staff
problem
XNb <
Producing
that
Stee I s
of
>*
the
contamination
X~tl.22~lO‘~X~u
XN+l .27x10m6 X&l0
I lty
XCu
would
+1.6x10-7XMn+l.91X10-4~A,
on the
speclficatlons.
XRb
XMn (
2.57~10’4Xh~t3.25~10’4 ,Xt
(
1”
necessary
as
be major
included
an approximation
X~%2xlO’~
+8.44x10-3
(
5.14x10-3 1.43x20-2 5.2x10-3 1.9x10-4 2.457x10-2 l.8XlO’3 1.2x10-5 3x10-6 (3x20-6)
and
amounts IS
Cu,
low for
appear
XNitt.43~10’2
+1 .8x10s3
1.6x% 8.44x10’3
produced.
only
is -
5.14x10-3
steels
is
radio-
N ,
I ons.
are
this
the
very
lower)
activity
equation.
for
examp I e,
transmutat
N
8.17x10-4
35 10 10 7000 35 8 7000 10 (20) 0.20 7000 10
consulted
unity.
an emplricai
from
magnitude to
(n/K) Class A
7000
products
dcmlnate
transmutations
contributors
waste
than
accounting
would
levels.
activity produced
K
in Progress
must
shown
Regulation Requirements, Class A
5.72 2.74 0;28 0,143 0.052 1.35 0.86 0.0145 0.0844 3x20-5 3x20-5 0.20 0.117 0.0844 8.10’6
as a good approximation,
equation those
Speclf ic Activity,n (Cl/cm3/appm)
Dominant Radionuclldes
producers
of
and purity were
proposed
structural
materlalll,
of
solutions materials
to are
the
elements
that
or
(2)
use
the
waste (1) are of
disposal isotropic
used
in the
conventtonal
T. Lechterlberg
materials that
without
activate
Isotopic
certain to
control
tailoring
naturally
occurring molybdenum
I nteractl
by
ly.
Isotopic
such
which
ng w lth
radionucl
g5Mo to
has
the
during
g3Mo coul d,
therefore,
d I sadvantages
of
Industry
have
the
would
offending addition,
produced
heats
the
of
an
Al so,
done
and
tailoring
of
offending Two
a dual sitic
to
the
with
respect
phase
of I te
Silicon
shown
produce
may effect
alloy
which
radiation, phases,
body-centered therefore, In addition, martenslte
of
is
not
the fully
some ferrite.
effect
strength.
cubic inherently the act
and
in
to
number getter
(2) to
to of
of
in
of
the
sll
shift
is
in atcmlc have
be
icide
molybdenum
also
further
data may
embrittlement
smal I
pranotes
to
which be
a
carbides.
the
reduced
about
percent.
a
lmpurily suggests factor
of
in
ferrltic
s14.
REFERENCES
2.
wFusion Technology Development PI an Draf tw, Department of Energy, Off Ice of Fusion Energy, May 1983.
3.
Vogel sang, W., G. Kul cl nski, R. Lott, and T. Sung, wTransmutations, Radioactivll-y, and After-heat in a Deuterlum-Tritlum Tokamak Fusion React I on”, Nuclear IQ&IX&& 22 (1974) 379.
4.
HOI dren, J., wFuslon Energy in Its Fitness for the Long Term”, 2M (1978) 168.
5.
HOI dren, J., ItAspects of Safety for Fusion Mach1 nes”, presented at ANS meeting, 16 November 1983, Wash 1ngton, D. C.
6.
ME. Sawan, J In-Hua Huang, wNeutron Its Status of the MARS LfPb Blanket and Shield,w WIS-MARS-82-049, University of Wisconsin, 20 July 1982.
this
resist-
Context: w,
behavior.
ferrite,
structure,
resistant
large
and
properties
damage and swelling
irradiation
In
that
“Panel Report on Low Activation Materials for Fusion Appl icationsw, presented at DOE, 18 December 1982. (R. Conn, Ed. 1 In press.
marten-
corrosion,
martensite
nickel
and
precipitate
I izes
recent
the phase
1.
I ize
steel
While
on activation
4.
molyb-
stabi
temperature, of
steel
nickel
a decrease
would
contents
causing
the
the
elimination
to
phase
the
ance,
extent, (1)
a
also on
shift
levels
eliminating
are
should based
will
which stabi
be
M23C6 carbides
should
titanium
may
as molybdenum
martensitlc
molybdenum
and
affecting
amounts
amount
for
to the
isotopic
could
present,
contains
Both
in
steels
in the
has no adverse it
nl ng due
but
that
in
a lesser
if
carbides
amount
that
to
order
increase
tungsten
shou I d
al loys
martens
be very
controlled
to
which,
a shlf t
has must
scale
required
The exact
levels
and to
fully
for
martensltic In
strengthening
manner
same as
of
same canposition.
clear
influences
and,
strength
denum,
not
simi I ar
of
versus
fully
Tungsten a
also
the
time
adversely
HT-9. into
and
Proposed
differences
shift,
same atomic
for
I lze
alloying
steel
levels
been
the
Isotopes.
lZ%Cr-contai
In
the
large
the
major
molybdenum a
the
a
a
characteristics,
composition
HT-9.
entlre
because
phase
In the
stabi
incubation
attractive.
w I thout
separate
control
risky
GA Technologies
is
a
with
every
lored
lmpuri ty
It
on
elements
of
The
an to
qua1 ity
ly-tai
at
residual
smal I l*,
in
determining
alloy
produced.
more
this
field
g3mNb and
the
Therefore, is
counter
has
g4Mo and
that
swel I ing13.
added
processing
be created
be very
Isotopical
work the
is
to
and
a conventional
that
this
be
increasing
activation
unaccept-
cause
greatly
781
steels
strength
activate
respective-
isotopic
not
would
difficulty
between
the
radlonuclides
isotopes
element
to
would
dominant
For
occurring
g4Mo and g5Mo,
of martensitic
structure
certain
elements.
stable
g3mNb and g3Mo,
be removed
that
of
nine
tailoring
ides.
remove
neutrons
Ides
elements
radlonucl
to
isotopes
two of
able
led
means
example, isotopes,
alloying
/ An assessment
and
are are,
swellingl3. dislocations
vacancies,
thus
782
T. Lechtenberg
/An assessment of martensitic steels
7.
W.W. Engle, Jr., 'ANISN; A Multlgroup One-Dimensional Dlscrete Ordinates Transport Code With Anlstroplc Scattering," K-1693, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (1967).
11. Conn, R., Okula, K., and Johnson, A., t~Mlnlmlrlng Radioactivlty and Other Elemental Tallorlng of Features of Materials for Fusion Reactors", Nuclear m, 4L (1978) 389.
a.
D.M. Plaster, 8t al.., tQupIed 100 Group Neutron and 21 G-a-Ray Cross Section for EPR Calculations,tl ORNL-TM-4873, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (19355).
12. Memorandum, Battaglla, J., to Lechtenberg, T llRadloactivlty Calculations for Low memo Alloy Design", GA Al;Ivatlon JMB;MPMS;8202, September 28, 1982.
9.
T.Y. Sung and W.F. Vogelsang, "DKR: A RadIoactIvIty Calculation Code for Fusion Reactors," UWFDM-170. Nuclear Englneerlng Department, University od Wisconsin, Madlson, Wisconsin (1976).
13. Llttle, E., "Void Swelling In Irons and Ferrltlc Steels", J. Nuclear Materials, 87 (1979) P. 11.
10. Nuclear Regulatory Ccmmlsston, l'Licensina fo; Disposal o? RequIremet& Land Waste," RadIoactive lOCFR61. Federal Register, Vol. 46, No. 142. July 24. 1981.
14. Gelles, D., l'Mlcrostructural Examination of HT-9 Irradiated In the HFIR-CTR-32 for Development Alloy ExperImentI', Semlannual lrradlation Performance Progress Report, DDE/ER-0045/g, p. 161.