Hu, Chen2023-11-302023-11-302023-09https://hdl.handle.net/11299/258873University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2023. Major: Civil Engineering. Advisors: Joseph Labuz, Jia-Liang Le. 1 computer file (PDF);xii, 87 pages.Owing to its excellent mechanical properties and stability under high temperature and neutron irradiation conditions, SiC/SiC composites have emerged as promising materials for light water reactors (LWRs) in the development of accident-tolerant fuel (ATF) systems. Structural integrity and retention of hermeticity are two crucial requirements for SiC/SiC claddings during normal operations, and both of them are closely related to the material's proportional limit stress (PLS). Understanding the behavior of SiC/SiC composites under multiaxial stress states and developing a probabilistic approach for evaluating the structural vulnerability is of paramount importance for reliability-based analysis and design of SiC/SiC composite claddings. So far, there has been very limited effort towards experimental and analytical investigations of probabilistic failure of SiC/SiC claddings. This critical knowledge gap motivates the research presented in this dissertation. A probabilistic failure criterion is developed for SiC/SiC composites under multiaxial loading, and this criterion is incorporated into the reliability analysis of the structural integrity of SiC/SiC fuel cladding. The research consists of two parts: 1) experimental investigation of multiaxial failure behavior of SiC/SiC composites, and 2) theoretical modeling of time-dependent probabilistic failure of SiC/SiC cladding. In the experimental investigation, the PLS is determined by examining stress-strain response and acoustic emission measurements. The theoretical framework is derived by combining the finite weakest-link statistical model and the subcritical damage growth model. This theoretical model captures the time-dependent failure mechanism of the material, which has a major consequence in predicting the lifetime distribution of the cladding. Meanwhile, the model also predicts that the failure statistics of the cladding depend strongly on the cladding length. The results of the multiaxial experiments reveal the level of statistical variation of the PLS of SiC/SiC materials under different stress states. The theoretical model provides a robust analytical tool for extrapolation of small-scale laboratory test results to the behavior of full-scale claddings. These findings lay down a scientific foundation for the development of the reliability-based design of SiC/SiC fuel claddings, which will play an essential role in improving the structural safety and integrity of LWRs.enfinite weakest link modelreliability analysisSiC/SiC compositestime dependent probabilistic failure criterionExperimental And Theoretical Investigation Of Sic/Sic Composites Under Multiaxial LoadingThesis or Dissertation