Abstract
The influence of various surface treatments of industrial FeCrAl grades was investigated in order to reduce the formation of transition aluminas during thermal oxidation in the 800-950 °C temperature range. High temperature gas phase annealing in H2-H2O mixtures promoted the initial formation of an alpha thin film and no transition alumina formed during subsequent oxidation at lower temperatures, showing very low weight gains compared to nontreated grades. Such a treatment was shown to be efficient for iso-thermal oxidation in oxygen of laboratory foil specimens but also for cyclic air exposure of fiber mats in near-real operating conditions. Surface modification by application of a slurry TiO2 coating before oxidation was also shown to greatly reduce the amount of transition alumina, observed by X-Ray Diffraction and Laser Induced Optical Spectroscopy. For both treatments, the optimal conditions were determined and the influence on oxidation rate was assessed. © 2005 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
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CITATION STYLE
N’Dah, E., Galerie, A., Wouters, Y., Goossens, D., Naumenko, D., Kochubey, V., & Quadakkers, W. J. (2005). Metastable alumina formation during oxidation of FeCrAl and its suppression by surface treatments. Materials and Corrosion, 56(12), 843–847. https://doi.org/10.1002/maco.200503914
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