Establishing a Design Strategy for Corrosion Resistant Structural Materials in Molten Salt Technologies

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Abstract

To address the gap in material design strategies for structural components in molten salt-powered technologies, the current work aimed to identify key parameters governing corrosion induced degradation of materials during exposures in molten halide salts. The applicability of the data on dissolution rates of pure metals (e.g., Cr) in a given molten salt to enable predictions of corrosion behavior of multicomponent binary and ternary Fe-based model and Ni-based commercial alloys isothermally exposed in the purified KCl-MgCl 2 in quartz capsules at 700 and 800°C was evaluated. The influence of alloy chemistry on initial dissolution rates and the consequent impact on the time-dependent corrosion induced microstructural evolution in the alloy subsurface was predicted with a coupled thermodynamic-kinetic model. The model was well able to predict the Cr depletion in all investigated alloys demonstrating the ability of the proposed approach to enable a unique design strategy for structural materials in molten salts.

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Pillai, R., Sulejmanovic, D., Lowe, T., Raiman, S. S., & Pint, B. A. (2023). Establishing a Design Strategy for Corrosion Resistant Structural Materials in Molten Salt Technologies. JOM, 75(4), 994–1005. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11837-022-05647-9

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