H. Volzke et al., A FRACTURE-MECHANICS SAFETY CONCEPT TO ASSESS THE IMPACT BEHAVIOR OF DUCTILE CAST-IRON CONTAINERS FOR SHIPPING AND STORAGE OR RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS, Nuclear Engineering and Design, 150(2-3), 1994, pp. 357-366
Within the scope of the German licensing procedures for shipping and s
torage containers for radioactive materials made of ductile cast iron,
BAM performs approval design tests including material tests to ensure
the main safety goals of shielding, leaktightness and subcriticality
under ''Type B accident conditions''. So far the safety assessment con
cept of BAM is based essentially on the experimental proof of containe
r strength by prototype testing under most damaging test conditions in
connection with complete approval design tests, and has been develope
d especially for cylindrical casks like CASTOR- and TN-design. In conn
ection with the development of new container constructions such as ''c
ubic cast containers'', and the fast developments in the area of numer
ical calculation methods, there is a need for a more flexible safety c
oncept especially considering fracture mechanics aspects. This paper p
resents the state of work at BAM for such an extended safety concept f
or ductile cast iron containers, based on a detailed brittle fracture
safe design proof. The requirements on stress analysis (experimental o
r numerical), material properties, material qualification, quality ass
urance provisions and fracture mechanics safety assessment, including
well defined and justified factors of safety, are described.