An Experimental Basis for a Mixed Potential Model for Nuclear Fuel Corrosion within a Failed Waste Container

2004 ◽  
Vol 824 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.W. Shoesmith ◽  
J.J. Noël ◽  
F. Garisto

AbstractA mixed-potential model to predict the corrosion behaviour of nuclear fuel inside a failed carbon steel-lined copper waste container in a granitic repository is briefly described. A number of experiments underway to improve the mechanistic form of the model and to provide the necessary input data are discussed. A primary emphasis is placed on the consequences of the accumulation of corrosion product deposits on the fuel surface on the development of aggressive local chemistries, the cathodic reduction of H2O2 and potential for scavenging of H2O2 by the products of carbon steel corrosion (in particular H2).

Geosciences ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thalia Standish ◽  
Dmitrij Zagidulin ◽  
Sridhar Ramamurthy ◽  
Peter Keech ◽  
David Shoesmith ◽  
...  

Within the multi-barrier system proposed for the permanent disposal of used nuclear fuel, the primary engineered barrier is the sealed metallic container. The present Canadian container design utilizes a carbon steel vessel coated with Cu for corrosion protection. In the event of a defect in the Cu coating that exposes the steel substrate, galvanically accelerated corrosion of steel is, in principle, possible. In this work, the progression of corrosion at a simulated through-coating defect in 3.0 mol/L NaCl solution containing dissolved O2 was monitored using electrochemical measurements and imaged non-destructively using synchrotron X-ray micro computed tomography (micro-CT). The damage volume at the base of the simulated defect was measured from the 3D micro-CT data and used to calculate the amount of O2 used to drive steel corrosion. The results demonstrate that the availability of O2 determines the rate and overall extent of corrosion, while the coatings produced using different deposition and treatment methods (cold spray deposition, heat-treated cold spray deposition, electrodeposition) lead to different corrosion propagation geometries, with the distribution of damage depending on the quality of the Cu/steel interface.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (16) ◽  
pp. 4755
Author(s):  
Stanley Udochukwu Ofoegbu

Food contamination due to metal corrosion and the consequent leakage of metals into foods is a problem. Understanding the mechanism(s) of metal corrosion in food media is vital to evaluating, mitigating, and predicting contamination levels. Fruit juices have been employed as model corrosive media to study the corrosion behaviour of metallic material in food media. Carbon steel corrosion in fresh juices of tomato, orange, pineapple, and lemon, as well as dilute hydrochloric acid solutions at varied pH, was studied using scanning electron microscopy, gravimetric and spectrophotometric techniques, and comparisons made between the corrosivity of these juices and mineral acids of comparable pH. The corrosion of carbon steel in fruit juices and HCl solutions manifests as a combination of uniform and pitting corrosion. Gravimetric data acquired after one hour of immersion at ambient temperature (22 °C) indicated corrosion rates of 0.86 mm yr−1 in tomato juice (pH ≈ 4.24), 1.81 mm yr−1 in pineapple juice (pH ≈ 3.94), 1.52 mm yr−1 in orange juice (pH ≈ 3.58), and 2.89 mm yr−1 in lemon juice (pH ≈ 2.22), compared to 2.19 mm yr−1 in 10−2 M HCl (pH ≈ 2.04), 0.38 mm yr−1 in 10−3 M HCl (pH ≈ 2.95), 0.17 mm yr−1 in 10−4 M HCl (pH ≈ 3.95), and 0.04 mm yr−1 in 10−5 M HCl (pH ≈ 4.98). The correlation of gravimetrically acquired corrosion data with post-exposure spectrophotometric analysis of fruit juices enabled de-convolution of iron contamination rates from carbon steel corrosion rates in fruit juices. Elemental iron contamination after 50 h of exposure to steel samples was much less than the values predicted from corrosion data (≈40%, 4.02%, 8.37%, and 9.55% for tomato, pineapple, orange, and lemon juices, respectively, relative to expected values from corrosion (weight loss) data). Tomato juice (pH ≈ 4.24) was the least corrosive to carbon steel compared to orange juice (pH ≈ 3.58) and pineapple juice (pH ≈ 3.94). The results confirm that though the fruit juices are acidic, they are generally much less corrosive to carbon steel compared to hydrochloric acid solutions of comparable pH. Differences in the corrosion behaviour of carbon steel in the juices and in the different mineral acid solutions are attributed to differences in the compositions and pH of the test media, the nature of the corrosion products formed, and their dissolution kinetics in the respective media. The observation of corrosion products (iron oxide/hydroxide) in some of the fruit juices (tomato, pineapple, and lemon juices) in the form of apparently hollow microspheres indicates the feasibility of using fruit juices and related wastes as “green solutions” for the room-temperature and hydrothermal synthesis of metal oxide/hydroxide particles.


Author(s):  
Natalia A. Medvedeva ◽  
Svetlana Y. Balandina ◽  
Alice G. Bortnik ◽  
Mariia D. Plotnikova ◽  
Natalya Y. Lisovenko

It is determined that in the oil field regions of the Perm Territory, water and soil samples contain micromycetes of various kinds. Penicillium, Aspergillus, Trichoderma were identified and identified. The effect of micromycetes on steel corrosion was investigated using the fungus resistance method. It was established that the presence of Penicillium, Aspergillus, Trichoderma causes significant corrosion damage to structural carbon steel quality grade St20. The nature of corrosion damage was determined by optical microscopy. It was shown that the areas affected by micromycetes have an uneven nature of corrosion damage with individual point and ulcerative lesions of the St20 surface. The change in the intensity of the growth of micromycetes of various kinds on steel from the time of exposure was established.


2021 ◽  
Vol 187 ◽  
pp. 109507
Author(s):  
Wen Long Ma ◽  
Han Xiang Wang ◽  
Richard Barker ◽  
Nikil Kapur ◽  
Yong Hua ◽  
...  

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