Oxidation and carburization behaviour of two type 316H stainless steel casts in simulated AGR gas environment at 550 and 600 °C

J. Eaton-Mckay*, K. Yan, X. Zhong, M.D. Callaghan, E. Jimenez-Melero

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The time-dependent oxidation and carburization behaviour of two type 316H austenitic stainless steels with varying Mn content and differing average austenite grain size of 142 µm in ‘Low Mn’ (0.98 wt.% Mn) and 81 µm in ‘High Mn’ (1.52 wt.% Mn), were assessed at 550 °C and 600 °C in the presence of simulated reactor primary gas coolant containing 500 vppm H2O, 100 vppm H2, 300 vppm CH4 and 1 vol.% CO, balanced with CO2. Rupture and spallation of the initial protective chromia layer occurs in the ‘High Mn’ steel after 2000 h at 550 °C, and leads to the formation of a magnetite/spinel oxide layer that reaches 75% surface coverage only after 8000 h. In contrast, ‘Low Mn’ steel reaches ~ 85% coverage after only 1000 h at the same temperature. The development of an inner carburized layer occurs gradually in both steels once the duplex oxide layer is forming. The differences in steel behaviour are reduced at 600 °C, where both oxidation and carburization are significantly accelerated. Only 0.02 wt.% carbon remains in solid solution in the austenite lattice in the carburized layer, the excess carbon atoms precipitating out in the form of Cr-rich M23C6 particles, present both inter- and intragranularly. The experimental values of the activation energy for carburization suggest that diffusion of substitutional solutes as the rate-limiting mechanism of the process. Previously observed carburization depths of ≥ 200 µm in ex-service austenitic stainless steels, may be achieved by pre-conditioning 316H steel in simulated reactor gas coolant for ≥ 6000 h at 600 °C.

Original languageEnglish
Article number152999
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Nuclear Materials
Volume552
Early online date28 Apr 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Aug 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work has been funded by Jacobs and EDF Energy. The authors wish to thank Dr. Marc Chevalier at EDF Energy and Dr. Andrew Wisbey at Jacobs for valuable discussions. We would also like to acknowledge the technical support at the University of Manchester of Andrew Forest during the nano-hardness measurements and Dr. John Warren in case of the X-ray diffraction measurements. This work has been published with the permission of EDF Energy and Jacobs.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021

Keywords

  • advanced gas-cooled reactors
  • austenitic stainless steel
  • carburization
  • nano-hardness
  • Oxidation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Nuclear and High Energy Physics
  • General Materials Science
  • Nuclear Energy and Engineering

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