Oxide Growth and Oxygen Transport in Proton Irradiated Zircaloy-4 Oxide Layers

2021 ◽  
pp. 109655
Author(s):  
Christopher Jones ◽  
Mhairi Gass ◽  
Michael Preuss ◽  
Katie L. Moore
2008 ◽  
Vol 1125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy Bischoff ◽  
Arthur T. Motta ◽  
Lizhen Tan ◽  
Todd R. Allen

ABSTRACTHCM12A is a ferritic-martensitic steel alloy envisioned for cladding and structural material in the Generation IV Supercritical Water Reactor (SCWR). This alloy was oxidized in 600°C supercritical water for 2, 4 and 6 weeks, and the oxide layers formed were analyzed using microbeam synchrotron radiation and electron microscopy. The oxide layers show a three-layer structure with an Fe3O4 outer layer, an inner layer containing a mixture of Fe3O4 and FeCr2O4 and a diffusion layer containing FeCr2O4 and Cr2O3 precipitates along ferrite lath boundaries. The base metal microstructure has a strong influence on the advancement of the oxide layers, due to the segregation at the lath boundaries of chromium rich particles, which are oxidized preferentially.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca C. Woodhouse ◽  
Richard J. Wilbraham ◽  
Colin Boxall

ABSTRACTDuring the lifetime of a nuclear facility, radioactive material may become deposited onto process and structural material surfaces. Due to their high corrosion resistance, steels comprise the largest class of metal-based materials encountered on nuclear sites. A greater understanding of the mechanisms of how contaminant radionuclides interact with and attach to process steels in nuclear plant environments is required in order to enable informed decisions to be made about the design and effective application of decontamination techniques, reducing secondary wastes.There is limited literature relating to radionuclide sorption mechanisms on steels. Key studies have found that sorbed contamination is almost entirely located in the outermost oxide layers formed at steel surfaces. Thus, a molecular level investigation of contaminant uptake during induced oxide formation would be beneficial in developing steel decontamination strategies.Stainless steel 316L is commonly employed in the nuclear industry in process streams and pipework. Thus, we describe work carried out on electrochemically accelerated oxide growth on 316L and SS2343 (a 316L analog) in nitric acid media and its characterisation using combined voltammetric and microgravimetric measurements. These allow identification of active, passive, high voltage passive, transpassive and secondary passivation regimes in the associated current voltage curves. EQCM on SS2343 coated quartz crystal piezoelectrodes, combined with potentiodynamic polarisation data have allowed us to determine that fastest net growth of surface oxide occurs in the low voltage passive regime. Further, we have directly measured the growth of that layer by using in situ microgravimetry for the first time. We will be shortly using the methods described above and radionuclide surrogates for the study of contaminant uptake during oxide formation and uptake onto preformed oxide layers. XPS will be used to determine layer composition and mode of contaminant uptake.


Author(s):  
Selina Olthof ◽  
Kai Brinkmann ◽  
Ting Hu ◽  
Klaus Meerholz ◽  
Thoams Riedl

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