Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment

With a view to improving the prediction of primary water stress corrosion cracking in austenitic stainless steels, this investigation measured the oxide growth kinetics of 316L stainless steel when exposed to a simulated primary water environment of a pressurised water reactor (PWR). It is generally...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Matthews, Ryan Paul
Other Authors: Knutsen, Robert
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Mechanical Engineering 2019
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613178537443328
access_status_str Open Access
author Matthews, Ryan Paul
author2 Knutsen, Robert
author_browse Knutsen, Robert
Matthews, Ryan Paul
author_facet Knutsen, Robert
Matthews, Ryan Paul
author_sort Matthews, Ryan Paul
collection Thesis
description With a view to improving the prediction of primary water stress corrosion cracking in austenitic stainless steels, this investigation measured the oxide growth kinetics of 316L stainless steel when exposed to a simulated primary water environment of a pressurised water reactor (PWR). It is generally accepted that intergranular oxidation at the surface of a metal forms a preferential site for stress corrosion crack (SCC) initiation; therefore the kinetics of both surface and intergranular oxidation were measured. The influence of temperature, within the range of PWR primary water (290°C, 320°C and 360°C), as well as the influence of starting condition (annealed, 20% elongated, 30% elongated and 20% cold rolled) was investigated. Samples were prepared with the various starting conditions and exposed to simulated primary water, at the specified temperatures, for various durations from 1 hour through to several thousand hours to plot the oxide growth on a log scale time axis. Subsequent to the exposure tests, the Cr rich inner oxide depth was measured locally at selected locations. The surface and intergranular oxide depth was directly measured from cross-sections either with a transmission electron microscope for short duration exposures or, for longer exposures with deeper oxides, within a scanning electron microscope. No significant difference was noted on the oxide kinetics between the various starting conditions evaluated. Temperature, however, had a significant influence with oxide growth kinetics decreasing, rather counter-intuitively, as temperature increased through the measured range. In addition a strong dependency on grain orientation was observed. A modification to the Point Defect Model was proposed to arrive at a quantitative expression to describe surface and intergranular inner oxide growth as a function of temperature in 316L stainless steel, which accommodated the deviation from Arrhenius behaviour through the measured temperature range. Functions for both the rate constant, ��3 0 , and the transfer coefficient, α3, associated with the metal/oxide interface reactions were developed. The resultant model was able to predict, with reasonable accuracy, the growth of the Cr-rich inner oxide over time. The most consistent explanation for the deviation from Arrhenius behaviour was that the coherency across the metal/oxide interface degraded as the temperature increased through the tested temperature range. This would reduce the potential for ionic transfer across the interface necessary for the interface to migrate and increase the oxide depth. Since a similar temperature dependence on the growth of intergranular stress corrosion cracking (IGSCC) in the primary water environment has been observed within the same temperature range, it is proposed that the above explanation, observed in the absence of applied stress, extends to explain the behaviour of IGSCC kinetics in austenitic stainless steel.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30416
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:00.945Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Department of Mechanical Engineering
publisherStr Department of Mechanical Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30416 Oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment Matthews, Ryan Paul Knutsen, Robert With a view to improving the prediction of primary water stress corrosion cracking in austenitic stainless steels, this investigation measured the oxide growth kinetics of 316L stainless steel when exposed to a simulated primary water environment of a pressurised water reactor (PWR). It is generally accepted that intergranular oxidation at the surface of a metal forms a preferential site for stress corrosion crack (SCC) initiation; therefore the kinetics of both surface and intergranular oxidation were measured. The influence of temperature, within the range of PWR primary water (290°C, 320°C and 360°C), as well as the influence of starting condition (annealed, 20% elongated, 30% elongated and 20% cold rolled) was investigated. Samples were prepared with the various starting conditions and exposed to simulated primary water, at the specified temperatures, for various durations from 1 hour through to several thousand hours to plot the oxide growth on a log scale time axis. Subsequent to the exposure tests, the Cr rich inner oxide depth was measured locally at selected locations. The surface and intergranular oxide depth was directly measured from cross-sections either with a transmission electron microscope for short duration exposures or, for longer exposures with deeper oxides, within a scanning electron microscope. No significant difference was noted on the oxide kinetics between the various starting conditions evaluated. Temperature, however, had a significant influence with oxide growth kinetics decreasing, rather counter-intuitively, as temperature increased through the measured range. In addition a strong dependency on grain orientation was observed. A modification to the Point Defect Model was proposed to arrive at a quantitative expression to describe surface and intergranular inner oxide growth as a function of temperature in 316L stainless steel, which accommodated the deviation from Arrhenius behaviour through the measured temperature range. Functions for both the rate constant, ��3 0 , and the transfer coefficient, α3, associated with the metal/oxide interface reactions were developed. The resultant model was able to predict, with reasonable accuracy, the growth of the Cr-rich inner oxide over time. The most consistent explanation for the deviation from Arrhenius behaviour was that the coherency across the metal/oxide interface degraded as the temperature increased through the tested temperature range. This would reduce the potential for ionic transfer across the interface necessary for the interface to migrate and increase the oxide depth. Since a similar temperature dependence on the growth of intergranular stress corrosion cracking (IGSCC) in the primary water environment has been observed within the same temperature range, it is proposed that the above explanation, observed in the absence of applied stress, extends to explain the behaviour of IGSCC kinetics in austenitic stainless steel. 2019-08-01T14:02:23Z 2019-08-01T14:02:23Z 2019 2019-07-30T07:25:47Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30416 Eng application/pdf Department of Mechanical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Matthews, Ryan Paul
Oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment
title_full Oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment
title_fullStr Oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment
title_full_unstemmed Oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment
title_short Oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment
title_sort oxidation kinetics of 316l stainless steel in the pressurised water reactor environment
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30416
work_keys_str_mv AT matthewsryanpaul oxidationkineticsof316lstainlesssteelinthepressurisedwaterreactorenvironment