In response to the need to reduce carbon dioxide gas emissions, Japan has been actively researching 700°C-class thermal power plants with a focus on improving overall plant efficiency. This technological advancement is fundamentally grounded in advanced materials development, encompassing the creation of high-strength alloys, fireside corrosion-resistant materials, and steamside oxidation-resistant alloys. A significant challenge emerged as some of the developed materials fell outside the scope of existing domestic technical standards. Moreover, the potential failure modes for advanced ultra-supercritical (A-USC) components operating at 700°C were anticipated to differ substantially from those observed in traditional ultra-supercritical (USC) components at 600°C. Consequently, researchers systematically examined and analyzed the potential failure modes specific to 700°C A-USC components, using these insights to establish comprehensive performance requirements. The research initiative, which commenced in June 2006, was strategically planned to develop a draft technical interpretation by March 2011. This paper provides a detailed overview of the investigative process, encompassing the comprehensive analysis of failure modes, the derivation of performance requirements, and the progression toward developing a new technical interpretation framework for high-temperature power plant components.

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