In this study, the tensile and fracture properties and the microstructure of the reduced-activation tempered martensitic steel Eurofer97 have been investigated. This technical alloy is a 9%Cr steel developed within the European fusion material research program. To a lesser extend, the plastic flow properties of a equiaxed ferritic Fe9%Cr model alloy were also studied for comparison with those of the tempered martensitic structure. The main objectives of this work are described hereafter: to correlate the microstructural features with the plastic flow properties measured by the tensile tests for both the Eurofer97 steel and the model alloy. The correlation established should be reflected in a physically-based model of plastic flow. to study the fracture properties of the Eurofer97 steel in details in the lower ductile-to-brittle transition region. to calculate with finite element modeling the stress fields at the crack tip. This information is further used in conjunction with a local approach model for quasi-cleavage to reconstruct the fracture toughness-temperature curve. Tensile tests were carried out at different imposed nominal strain rate at several temperatures from 77K up to 473K, on both the Eurofer97 steel and the Fe9%Cr model alloy. The temperature dependence of the yield stress was precisely determined. As expected for body-centered cubic (BCC) materials, a strong increase of the yield stress by decreasing temperature, below 200 K, was observed. At higher temperatures, the temperature dependence of the yield stress was found much weaker, being associated with the temperature dependence of the shear modulus. Efforts were made to analyze in details the post-yield behavior (strain-hardening) as a function of temperature. The post-yield behavior was modeled using the Kocks phenomenological model based on the competition of storage and annihilation of dislocations. While this model was originally developed for face-centered cubic (FCC) metals where the rate-controlling mechanism of dislocation motion is the dislocation-dislocation interaction, we used is model in the high temperature domain (T>200K) of BCC materials, to model the strain-hardening evolution of the Eurofer97 steel and the model alloy. The values obtained for the key parameters of the model, namely the dislocation mean free path and annihilation coefficient, were found consistent with the microstructural features. The parameters temperature-dependence observed was also consistent with the physics of two basic mechanisms of dislocation storage and annihilation (dynamical recovery). For the low temperature domain, the strain-hardening model was modified to account for the strong Peierls lattice friction, based on an original idea of Rauch. Transmission electron microscopy observations were done to characterize the undeformed microstructures and their evolution with strain. A clear correlation was established between the stress-dependence of the strain-hardening and the microstruc
John Martin Kolinski, Chenzhuo Li, Xinyue Wei