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The Effect of Neutron Irradiation Damage on the Properties of Grade NBG-10 Graphite

by Timothy D Burchell, Lance L Snead
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Journal of Nuclear Materials
Publication Date
Page Numbers
18 to 27
Volume
371
Issue
1-3

Nuclear Block Graphite-10 (NBG-10) is a medium-grain, near-isotropic graphite manufactured by SGL Carbon Company at their plant in Chedde, France. NBG-10 graphite was developed as a candidate core structural material for the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor (PBMR) currently being designed in South Africa, and for prismatic reactor concepts being developed in the USA and Europe. NBG-10 is one of several graphites included in the US-DOE Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR) program. Thirty-six NBG-10 graphite flexure bars have been successfully irradiated in a series of eighteen HFIR PTT capsules at ORNL. The capsule irradiation temperatures were 294�25, 360�25 and 691�25�C. The peak doses attained were 4.93, 6.67, and 6.69 x 1025 n/m2 [E>0.1 MeV] at ~294, ~360, and ~691�C, respectively. The high temperature irradiation volume and dimensional change behavior, and flexure strength and elastic modulus changes of NBG-10 were similar to other extruded, near-isotropic grades, such as H-451, which has been irradiated previously at ORNL. The low temperature (~294�C) irradiation volume and dimensional change behavior was also as expected for extruded graphites, i.e., exhibiting low dose swelling prior to shrinkage. This behavior was attributed to the relaxation of Âé¶¹Ó°Òô stress arising from the graphite manufacturing process and specimen machining. While the data reported here do not represent a complete database for NBG-10 graphite, they give a measure of confidence that the current generation of nuclear graphites will behave in a familiar and well understood manner.