1 / 16

-NETNUC- SCC Properties and Oxidation Behaviour of Candidate Materials at SCW conditions

-NETNUC- SCC Properties and Oxidation Behaviour of Candidate Materials at SCW conditions . Sami Penttilä. NETNUC/GEN4FIN meeting 03.04.2009, VTT, Espoo. Content. Weight gain tests SCC susceptibility Status of oxidation studies using bellows system Summary. Weight gain tests.

kent
Télécharger la présentation

-NETNUC- SCC Properties and Oxidation Behaviour of Candidate Materials at SCW conditions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. -NETNUC-SCC Properties and Oxidation Behaviour of Candidate Materials at SCW conditions Sami Penttilä NETNUC/GEN4FIN meeting 03.04.2009, VTT, Espoo

  2. Content • Weight gain tests • SCC susceptibility • Status of oxidation studies using bellows system • Summary

  3. Weight gain tests • Sixteen materials from the four different alloy groups for screening stage: Chemical compositions of the studied alloys (wt-%)

  4. Weight gains at different temperatures for selected alloysafter ~600 h exposure to SCW conditions (25 MPa)

  5. Weight gain test Weight gains of 316L pipe with different surface treatments T = 650°C, t = 1000 h, p = 25 MPa and D02 = 125 ppb

  6. 316L pipe samples with different surface finishes after 1000 h exposure to SCW at 650°C machined as received grit #600 grit #1200

  7. Optical images of the 316L pipe samples after 1000 h exposure to SCW at 650°C grit #1200 surface finish machined surface oxide thickness ~ 40 – 50 µm oxide thickness ~ 2 µm

  8. Improving corrosion and oxidation behavior of materials at SCW conditions • Chemical composition, Cr content > 18% • GB modification → thermomechanical processing • Application of surface treatment, e.g. CW • Effect of CW • An enhanced Cr diffusivity • increased defect density • Results to a more compact and continuous (uniform diffusivity) Cr-oxide layer • Dense Cr-oxide layer decrease the outward/inward transport of Fe and O Babcock-Hitachi Europe Gmbh, Advanced materials for AD700 boilers, Milano, Italy, 2005

  9. SCC susceptibility - SSRT • T = 500°C and 650°C, p = 25 MPa and DO2 = 125 ppb • Strain rate of 3x10-7 s-1 • Materials • 316NG • 347H • 1.4970 • BGA4 • PM2000

  10. Stress-strain curves for the studied alloys under SCW conditions at 500°C and 650°C 500°C 650°C

  11. SEM images of the fracture surface of alloy 1.4970 after SSRT at 500°C

  12. SEM images of the fracture surface of alloy BGA4 after SSRT at 500°C

  13. Summary of SCC susceptibility after SSRT at 500°C and 650°C under SCW conditions

  14. Oxidation kinetic studies (CER/CEI) using pneumatic servo-controlled bellows system

  15. Status of DB-system • Problems with pressure tube material (316L) • Problems with welding • New miniature DB-system has been designed by P. Moilanen • Purpose is to perform mechanical loading (3-PB etc.) tests for selected materials at SCW conditions • Oxidation kinetic studies using CER/CEI methods • CEI and CER analysis have showed that most of the commercial materials behave like semiconductors under SCW conditions

  16. Summary • The oxidation rate of F/M steels is too high for SCWR core components even at the temperatures below 500°C • Austenitic stainless steels, which have a good enough oxidation resistance up to 500 – 550°C have been selected as a candidate materials for most HPLWR core components • 20% Cr ODS steel was selected for the fuel rod cladding material because of its excellent oxidation resistance even up to 650°C, its SCC resistance and its good creep specifications • However, the SSRT results in this work are not in line with the creep strength specifications • More studies are needed in the behaviour of high Cr F/M ODS steels in supercritical water • Other problems with the ODS materials are the difficulties in welding and high prices • Therefore these materials are recommended to applications where high strength and oxidation resistance are needed, but only little additional joining is required • A possible road for the fuel cladding development may be coating of austenitic stainless steels or F/M steels • Processes that have been studied are diffusion coatings (i.e. slurry application, CVD) and overlay coatings (thermal spray, PVD, electroless coatings)

More Related