Assessment of environmental fatigue in nuclear power plants: A comparative analysis of the effects of plasticity correction

Tae Song Han, Hee Jin Kim, Nam Su Huh, Hyeong Yeon Lee, Changheui Jang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

In accordance with Regulatory Guide 1.207, Rev.1, fatigue assessments must be conducted considering the influence of primary coolant environment in nuclear reactors. Environmental fatigue, resulting from corrosion in the primary coolant, is evaluated in air fatigue life assessments through the application of an environmental fatigue correction factor. This environmental fatigue correction factor depends on sulfur content, operating temperature, dissolved oxygen, and strain rate. It remains constant for sulfur content, operating temperature, and dissolved oxygen, while strain rate introduces potential errors based on the analysis method. The current fatigue evaluation procedure for air, following ASME B&PV Code Sec.III, NB-3200, employs elastic analysis with a simplified elastic-plastic correction factor(Ke). However, Ke factor is considered excessively conservative, prompting less conservative alternatives proposed by JSME, RCC-M, ASME Code Case N-779. This study applied both ASME Ke and JSME Ke for fatigue evaluations considering environmental effects. Additionally, fatigue assessments accounting for elastic-plastic effects were conducted using Neuber and Glinka methods, compared with actual experiments. The analysis systematically examined changes in fatigue life and the environmental fatigue correction factor due to plastic effects in environmental fatigue evaluations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3764-3774
Number of pages11
JournalNuclear Engineering and Technology
Volume56
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2024

Keywords

  • Environmental fatigue
  • Glinka method
  • Neuber method
  • Simplified elastic-plastic correction factor

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