ASTM E900-15
Standard Guide for Predicting Radiation-Induced Transition Temperature Shift in Reactor Vessel Materials

Standard No.
ASTM E900-15
Release Date
2015
Published By
American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM)
Status
Replace By
ASTM E900-15e1
Latest
ASTM E900-21
Scope

4.1 Operation of commercial power reactors must conform to pressure-temperature limits during heatup and cooldown to prevent over-pressurization at temperatures that might cause non-ductile behavior in the presence of a flaw. Radiation damage to the reactor vessel is compensated for by adjusting the pressure-temperature limits to higher temperatures as the neutron damage accumulates. The present practice is to base that adjustment on the TTS produced by neutron irradiation as measured at the Charpy V-notch 41-J (30-ft·lbf) energy level. To establish pressure temperature operating limits during the operating life of the plant, a prediction of TTS must be made.

4.1.1 In the absence of surveillance data for a given reactor material (see Practice E185 and E2215), the use of calculative procedures are necessary to make the prediction. Even when credible surveillance data are available, it will usually be necessary to interpolate or extrapolate the data to obtain a TTS for a specific time in the plant operating life. The embrittlement correlation presented herein has been developed for those purposes.

4.2 Research has established that certain elements, notably copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), phosphorus (P), and manganese (Mn), cause a variation in radiation sensitivity of reactor pressure vessel steels. The importance of other elements, such as silicon (Si), and carbon (C), remains a subject of additional research. Copper, nickel, phosphorus, and manganese are the key chemistry parameters used in developing the calculative procedures described here.

4.3 Only power reactor (PWR and BWR) surveillance data were used in the derivation of these procedures. The measure of fast neutron fluence used in the procedure is n/m2 (E > 1 MeV). Differences in fluence rate and neutron energy spectra experienced in power reactors and test reactors have not been accounted for in these procedures.

1.1 This guide presents a method for predicting values of reference transition temperature shift (TTS) for irradiated pressure vessel materials. The method is based on the TTS exhibited by Charpy V-notch data at 41-J (30-ft·lbf) obtained from surveillance programs conducted in several countries for commercial pressurized (PWR) and boiling (BWR) light-water cooled (LWR) power reactors. An embrittlement correlation has been developed from a statistical analysis of the large surveillance database consisting of radiation-induced TTS and related information compiled and analyzed by Subcommittee E10.02. The details of the database and analysis are described in a separate report (1).2,3, This embrittlement c......

ASTM E900-15 history

  • 2021 ASTM E900-21 Standard Guide for Predicting Radiation-Induced Transition Temperature Shift in Reactor Vessel Materials
  • 2015 ASTM E900-15e2 Standard Guide for Predicting Radiation-Induced Transition Temperature Shift in Reactor Vessel Materials
  • 2015 ASTM E900-15e1 Standard Guide for Predicting Radiation-Induced Transition Temperature Shift in Reactor Vessel Materials
  • 2015 ASTM E900-15 Standard Guide for Predicting Radiation-Induced Transition Temperature Shift in Reactor Vessel Materials
  • 2002 ASTM E900-02(2007) Standard Guide for Predicting Radiation-Induced Transition Temperature Shift in Reactor Vessel Materials, E706 (IIF)
  • 2002 ASTM E900-02 Standard Guide for Predicting Radiation-Induced Transition Temperature Shift in Reactor Vessel Materials, E706 (IIF)
  • 1987 ASTM E900-87(2001) Standard Guide for Predicting Neutron Radiation Damage to Reactor Vessel Materials, E 706 (IIF)
  • 1987 ASTM E900-87(1994) Standard Guide for Predicting Neutron Radiation Damage to Reactor Vessel Materials, E 706 (IIF)



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