A phase-field study of stainless-steel oxidation from high-temperature carbon dioxide exposure

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Abstract

An electrochemical phase-field model has been developed to investigate the oxidation mechanisms of the 21-2N valve stainless steel alloy exposed to carbon dioxide at 973 K. Three oxide phases observed in oxidation experiments are included in the model: Mn3O4, Cr2O3, and MnCr2O4. Local charge neutrality and the conserved current condition are assumed to include the impact of the electric potential on oxidation, though it is found to be negligible when the system is electrically isolated. The sensitivity of the oxidation processes to the values of the diffusion mobilities is examined, and the oxidation rate is calibrated against experimental data by modifying the sensitive mobilities. We find that both inward oxygen and outward metal diffusion are important for oxidation. By investigating the impact of the order of the initial oxide layers, we find that Cr2O3 serves as a barrier to outward Mn diffusion. Moreover, controlling the initial oxide layer order can be used to limit oxidation.

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Wu, X., Abdallah, I., Jiang, W., Ullberg, R. S., Phillpot, S. R., Couet, A., … Tonks, M. R. (2023). A phase-field study of stainless-steel oxidation from high-temperature carbon dioxide exposure. Computational Materials Science, 218. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.commatsci.2022.111996

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