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Assessment of tensile residual stress mitigation in Alloy 22 welds due to laser peening A T. DeWald J E. Rankin Michael R. Hill, University of California, Davis M J. Lee H L. Chen
ABSTRACT: This paper examines the effects of laser peening on Alloy 22 (UNS
N06022), which is the proposed material for use as the outer layer on the
spent-fuel nuclear waste canisters to be stored at Yucca Mountain. Stress
corrosion cracking (SCC) is a primary concern in the design of these canisters
because tensile residual stresses will be left behind by the closure weld.
Alloy 22 is a nickel-based material that is particularly resistant to
corrosion; however there is a chance that stress corrosion cracking could
develop given the right environmental conditions. Laser peening is an emerging
surface treatment technology that has been identified as an effective tool for
mitigating tensile redisual stresses in the storage canisters. The results of
laser-peening experiments on Alloy 22 base material and a sample 33 mm thick
double-V groove butt-weld made with gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW) are
presented. Residual stress profiles were measured in Alloy 22 base material
using the slitting method (also known as the crack-compliance method), and a
full 2D map of longitudinal residual stress was measured in the sample welds
using the contour method. Laser peening was found to produce compressive
residual stress to a depth of 3.8 mm in 20 mm thick base material coupons. The
depth of compressive residual stress was found to have a, significant
dependence on the number of peening layers and a slight dependence on the level
of irradiance. Additionally, laser peening produced compressive residual
stresses to a depth of 4.3 mm in the 33 mm thick weld at the center of the weld
bead where high levels of tensile stress were initially present.
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