By Alexis Starks, NSUF at Idaho National
Laboratory
In
a major step towards commercial, small modular reactor deployment, progress is
being made in testing new materials for NuScale's small modular reactor lower
containment vessel.
In 2019, NuScale Power LLC received access to Idaho
National Laboratory’s Advanced Test Reactor and Westinghouse Churchill
Laboratory Services through the Nuclear Science User Facilities (NSUF) as part
of the Consolidated Innovative Nuclear Research program. The arrangement
allowed NuScale to obtain irradiation data on F6NM, a martensitic stainless
steel, with the intent of using F6NM for its lower containment vessel as part
of the NuScale power module design for small modular reactors.
(Left to right) Idaho National Laboratory Operations Supervisor Geremy
Schuldt, and Nuclear Operators Colt Farmer and Dalton Dummer, configure the experiment
in preparation for installation at ATR.
The NuScale lower containment vessel, which is capable of withstanding
pressures during reactor operations, is a safety feature that prevents fission
products from being transported to the outside atmosphere. In its current
design, NuScale uses FXM-19, an austenitic stainless steel that is resistant to
irradiation embrittlement and corrosion and has higher American Society of Mechanical
Engineers design specifications than other common austenitic stainless steels.
The downfall? FXM-19 is expensive to cast and fabricate in large sizes needed
for the containment vessel.
F6NM, to compare, is also corrosion resistant, more cost effective and more
readily available than FXM-19 – and it has higher design specifications, so
long as it performs as expected after irradiation.
September 2023 marked the completion of the first of four cycles, which began in July 2023 at the Advanced
Test Reactor. After irradiating the high-fluence target specimens, NSUF shipped
them to Westinghouse, an industry partner facility, for post-irradiation
examination to include Charpy and tensile testing.
This
experiment is uniquely complex, requiring novel approaches, such as direct
specimen contact with water, the reactor’s primary coolant, to achieve the
experiment’s low temperature requirement, and the use of three high-power,
short-duration Power Axial Locator Mechanism cycles to meet the experiment’s low-fluence
requirements.
According to NuScale’s 2019 CINR research proposal, the qualification
of F6NM would “reduce manufacturing cost and schedule for NuScale module
production.” The data and material specimens generated by this experiment will
be publicly available through the NSUF Nuclear Fuels and Materials Library and would “[benefit]
the industry by promoting the adoption of higher strength steels with improved
thermal efficiency for other nuclear vessel applications.”