Effect of Cr/Mo on the Protectiveness of Corrosion Scales on Carbon Steel in Sweet Medium under High Flow Regime

2017 ◽  
Vol 80 (10) ◽  
pp. 509-517 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mobbassar Hassan Sk ◽  
Aboubakr Moustafa Abdullah ◽  
Monika Ko ◽  
Nick Laycock ◽  
Bridget Ingham ◽  
...  
Forests ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhipeng Xu ◽  
Wenfei Liu ◽  
Xiaohua Wei ◽  
Houbao Fan ◽  
Yizao Ge ◽  
...  

Fruit tree planting is a common practice for alleviating poverty and restoring degraded environment in developing countries. Yet, its environmental effects are rarely assessed. The Jiujushui watershed (261.4 km2), located in the subtropical Jiangxi Province of China, was selected to assess responses of several flow regime components on both reforestation and fruit tree planting. Three periods of forest changes, including a reference (1961 to 1985), reforestation (1986 to 2000) and fruit tree planting (2001 to 2016) were identified for assessment. Results suggest that the reforestation significantly decreased the average magnitude of high flow by 8.78%, and shortened high flow duration by 2.2 days compared with the reference. In contrast, fruit tree planting significantly increased the average magnitude of high flow by 27.43%. For low flows, reforestation significantly increased the average magnitude by 46.38%, and shortened low flow duration by 8.8 days, while the fruit tree planting had no significant impact on any flow regime components of low flows. We conclude that reforestation had positive impacts on high and low flows, while to our surprise, fruit tree planting had negative effects on high flows, suggesting that large areas of fruit tree planting may potentially become an important driver for some negative hydrological effects in our study area.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mobbassar hassan Sk ◽  
Aboubakr Moustafa Abdullah ◽  
Noora Hamad S Al-Qahtani ◽  
Nick Laycock ◽  
Mary P Ryan ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Cristina Aguilar ◽  
Alberto Montanari ◽  
María José Polo

Abstract. How long a river remembers its past is still an open question. Perturbations occurring in large catchments may impact the flow regime for several weeks and months, therefore providing a physical explanation for the occasional tendency of floods to occur in clusters. The research question explored in this paper may be stated as follows: can higher than usual river discharges in the low flow season be associated to a higher probability of floods in the subsequent high flow season? The physical explanation for such association may be related to the presence of higher soil moisture storage at the beginning of the high flow season, which may induce lower infiltration rates and therefore higher river runoff. Another possible explanation is persistence of climate, due to presence of long-term properties in atmospheric circulation. We focus on the Po River at Pontelagoscuro, whose catchment area amounts to 71 000 km2. We look at the stochastic connection between average river flows in the pre-flood season and the peak flows in the flood season by using a bivariate probability distribution. We found that the shape of the flood frequency distribution is significantly impacted by the river flow regime in the low flow season. The proposed technique, which can be classified as a data assimilation approach, may allow one to reduce the uncertainty associated to the estimation of the flood probability.


2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 151-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Wei ◽  
Yucheng Zhang ◽  
Xiaolu Pang ◽  
Kewei Gao

AbstractCarbon dioxide (CO2) corrosion at low partial pressure has been widely recognized, but research on supercritical CO2 (SC CO2) corrosion is very limited. By far, investigations on steel corrosion under SC CO2 conditions have mainly focused on the corrosion rate, structure, morphology, and composition of the corrosion scales as well as the electrochemical behaviors. It was found in aqueous SC CO2 environment, that the corrosion rate of carbon steel was very high, and even stainless steels (13Cr and high-alloy CrNi steels) were subjected to some corrosion. Inhibitor could reduce the corrosion rate of carbon steels and stainless steels, but none of the tested inhibitors could reduce the corrosion rate of carbon steel to an acceptable value. Impurities such as O2, SO2, and NO2 and their mixtures in SC CO2 increased the corrosion rate of carbon steel. However, the existing studies so far were very limited on the corrosion mechanism of steels in SC CO2 conditions. Thus, this paper first reviews the finding on the corrosion behaviors of steels under SC CO2 conditions, points out the shortcomings in the present investigations and finally looks forward to the research prospects on SC CO2 corrosion.


2014 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 101-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.L. Li ◽  
H.X. Ma ◽  
S.D. Zhu ◽  
C.T. Qu ◽  
Z.F. Yin

Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wubneh B. Abebe ◽  
Seifu A. Tilahun ◽  
Michael M. Moges ◽  
Ayalew Wondie ◽  
Minychl G. Derseh ◽  
...  

The sustainable development of water resources includes retaining some amount of the natural flow regime in water bodies to protect and maintain aquatic ecosystem health and the human livelihoods and wellbeing dependent upon them. Although assessment of environmental flows is now occurring globally, limited studies have been carried out in the Ethiopian highlands, especially studies to understand flow-ecological response relationships. This paper establishes a hydrological foundation of Gumara River from an ecological perspective. The data analysis followed three steps: first, determination of the current flow regime—flow indices and ecologically relevant flow regime; second, naturalization of the current flow regime—looking at how flow regime is changing; and, finally, an initial exploration of flow linkages with ecological processes. Flow data of Gumara River from 1973 to 2018 are used for the analysis. Monthly low flow occurred from December to June; the lowest being in March, with a median flow of 4.0 m3 s−1. Monthly high flow occurred from July to November; the highest being in August, with a median flow of 236 m3 s−1. 1-Day low flows decreased from 1.55 m3 s−1 in 1973 to 0.16 m3 s−1 in 2018, and 90-Day (seasonal) low flow decreased from 4.9 m3 s−1 in 1973 to 2.04 m3 s−1 in 2018. The Mann–Kendall trend test indicated that the decrease in low flow was significant for both durations at α = 0.05. A similar trend is indicated for both durations of high flow. The decrease in both low flows and high flows is attributed to the expansion of pump irrigation by 29 km2 and expansion of plantations, which resulted in an increase of NDVI from 0.25 in 2000 to 0.29 in 2019. In addition, an analysis of environmental flow components revealed that only four “large floods” appeared in the last 46 years; no “large flood” occurred after 1988. Lacking “large floods” which inundate floodplain wetlands has resulted in early disconnection of floodplain wetlands from the river and the lake; which has impacts on breeding and nursery habitat shrinkage for migratory fish species in Lake Tana. On the other hand, the extreme decrease in “low flow” components has impacts on predators, reducing their mobility and ability to access prey concentrated in smaller pools. These results serve as the hydrological foundation for continued studies in the Gumara catchment, with the eventual goal of quantifying environmental flow requirements.


Author(s):  
John Hickling ◽  
Renate Kilian ◽  
Leslie Spain ◽  
John Carey

Environmental fatigue testing of small-scale austenitic stainless steel components under simulated pressurized water reactor (PWR) operating conditions was sponsored by the EPRI Materials Reliability Program (MRP) Fatigue Issue Task Group and the U.S. Department of Energy to fill in some important gaps in the knowledge base. An analysis and assessment of existing fatigue data for stainless steel exposed to the PWR primary environment identified a lack of data with respect to flow rate effects. The majority of existing data has been gained under static or quasi-static flow conditions, where the tendency to environmental enhancement of cyclic crack growth is generally expected to increase. However plant experience — where high-flow conditions prevail — shows significantly lower susceptibility to corrosion fatigue cracking. The main objective of the present test program was the identification of flow-rate effects on the initiation and growth of low-cycle corrosion fatigue (LCF) cracks in cold-drawn, 304L stainless steel tube U-bend specimens undergoing cyclic loading and simultaneous exposure to simulated PWR primary water on the inside of the tube. Use was made of a pre-existing facility at F-ANP in Germany where the experimental concept had been previously tested on carbon-steel U-bends. The test equipment was set up so as to allow direct comparison of results obtained under quasi-stagnant conditions (∼0.005 m/s flow rate at the internal surface) with relatively high-flow conditions (∼ 2.2 m/s flow rate). In accordance with literature data, PWR primary water was shown to have a significant effect on the high-temperature fatigue behavior of the bends, as demonstrated by the observed change in failure mode and location of cracking between baseline specimens (tested in nitrogen) and those bends exposed to simulated reactor coolant. Metallography and fractography suggest that the environment is acting by affecting both crack initiation and crack growth. In contrast to the situation for carbon steel, no beneficial effect of higher flow rate on the number of cycles to failure (leakage) was observed. The paper discusses further details of the environmental fatigue data obtained, including the effects of strain amplitude, strain rate and surface condition. It also provides a comparison of test results with the current ASME Section III fatigue curves.


Author(s):  
Y. L. Chen ◽  
J. R. Bradley

Considerable effort has been directed toward an improved understanding of the production of the strong and stiff ∼ 1-20 μm diameter pyrolytic carbon fibers of the type reported by Koyama and, more recently, by Tibbetts. These macroscopic fibers are produced when pyrolytic carbon filaments (∼ 0.1 μm or less in diameter) are thickened by deposition of carbon during thermal decomposition of hydrocarbon gases. Each such precursor filament normally lengthens in association with an attached catalyst particle. The subject of filamentous carbon formation and much of the work on characterization of the catalyst particles have been reviewed thoroughly by Baker and Harris. However, identification of the catalyst particles remains a problem of continuing interest. The purpose of this work was to characterize the microstructure of the pyrolytic carbon filaments and the catalyst particles formed inside stainless steel and plain carbon steel tubes. For the present study, natural gas (∼; 97 % methane) was passed through type 304 stainless steel and SAE 1020 plain carbon steel tubes at 1240°K.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document