11214 Electrochemical Behavior of Silicon Modified Stainless Steels in High-Temperature Water

Thursday, March 17, 2011: 9:15 AM
Room 351 E (George R. Brown Convention Center)
Raul B. Rebak*
GE Global Research
Austenitic stainless steels are used extensively in commercial nuclear power plants. Under irradiation some of the materials may undergo grain boundary enrichment in some of the minor alloying elements or impurities. The objective of this research project was to characterize the electrochemical behavior of stainless steels with different amount of chromium, nickel and silicon. The amount of Si in the alloys were varied from ~1% to 5%, the amount of Cr varied from 12% to 19% and the amount of Ni from 8 to 15%. The electrochemical studies were performed using non-irradiated materials. The tests were carried out at 288°C in pure water and water contaminated with chloride, fluoride or sulfate in the order of 100 ppm. Typical electrochemical techniques such as polarization resistance (ASTM G59), potentiodynamic polarization, and EIS were used.
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