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1.
Three steels, 304SS, 310SS and 800H, were alloyed with 5%, 10%, and 20% (by weight) copper, and then exposed to 68%CO-31%H2-1%H2O gas at 680 °C (aC = 19 and pO2=5.4×10-25 atm) under thermal cycling conditions. Kinetic measurements showed that copper-free alloys all dusted, with 304SS experiencing the greatest metal wastage. Copper additions did not have any effect on metal wastage of 304SS, but reduced the attack on 310SS and 800H markedly at levels of 5% and 10%. However, increasing the copper content to 20% produced large copper-rich precipitates which accelerated dusting by promoting internal graphitisation.Dusting was associated with surface coking. When pitting occurred, on copper-free alloys and on copper containing 304SS, large coke structures grew above the pits. Internal grain boundary carburisation always took place, and intragranular carbides also precipitated when dusting occurred. A lamellar surface layer of internally precipitated spinel and austenite also developed in association with dusting. The copper effect is discussed in terms of its alloy solubility and its known beneficial effect in Ni-Cu binaries.  相似文献   

2.
The present study focuses on a new technique for the prevention of metal dusting in carbonaceous gas environments at intermediate temperature. Preliminary laboratory metal dusting test was conducted for transition‐metals and Ni‐x%Cu binary alloys in a simulated 60%CO‐26%H2‐11.5%CO2‐2.5%H2O (in vol.%) gas mixture at 650°C for 100 h. The metal dusting caused no coke deposition on transition‐metals of Cu, Ag, and Pt, while those of Fe, Co, and Ni have a large amount of coke and lost mass. Whether or not coking behavior of Ni‐Cu binary alloys formed any oxide scales in the simulated gas environment depended on the Cu content. Specimens containing low Cu were entirely covered with coke and showed rough metal surfaces due to the degradation of metal. Alloys of 20% and more Cu, on the contrary, had no coke deposition and smooth metal surfaces, suggesting alloys with an adequate Cu do not react with CO in the gas mixture without an oxide scale barrier. Based on these results, we conclude that Cu does not protect by formation of the oxide scale but has a “Surfactant‐Mediated Suppression” against metal dusting. This effect can be explained in terms of atomistic interaction of CO with transition‐metal surfaces by electronic structure analyses. The concept can be also useful for the practical material design of Ni‐Cr base alloy with excellent metal dusting resistance.  相似文献   

3.
Copper is thought to be noncatalytic to carbon deposition from gas atmospheres, and owing to its extremely low solubility for carbon, inert to the metal dusting reaction. Thus, the addition of copper to nickel, which forms a near perfect solid solution, may be able to suppress or greatly retard the metal dusting of the alloy, without the need for a protective oxide scale on the surface. The dusting behaviour of Ni‐Cu alloys containing up to 50 wt% Cu, along with pure Cu, was investigated in a 68%CO‐31%H2‐1%H2O gas mixture (aC: 19) at 680°C for up to 150 h. Surface analysis showed that two types of carbon deposits, graphite particle clusters and filaments, were observed on pure Ni and Ni‐Cu alloys with Cu contents of up to 5 wt%. Alloys with more than 10 wt% Cu showed very little coking, forming filaments only. SEM and TEM analyses revealed metal particles encapsulated by graphite shells within the graphite particle clusters, and metal particles at filament tips or embedded along their lengths. A kinetic investigation showed that alloy dusting rates decreased significantly with increasing copper levels up to 10 wt%. At copper concentrations of more than 20 wt%, the rate of metal dusting was negligible. Although pure copper is not catalytic to carbon formation, scattered carbon nanotubes were observed on its surface. The effect of copper on alloy dusting rates is attributed to a dilution effect.  相似文献   

4.
Metal dusting     
This introductory review paper summarizes shortly the research on metal dusting, conducted in the MPI for Iron Research during the last dozen years. Metal dusting is a disintegration of metals and alloys to a dust of graphite and metal particles, occurring in carburizing atmospheres at aC > 1 and caused by the tendency to graphite formation. The cause of destruction is inward growth of graphite planes into the metal phase, or in the case of iron and low alloy steels into cementite formed as an intermediate. The kinetics of metal dusting on iron and steels was elucidated concerning dependencies on time, temperature and partial pressures. High alloy steels and Ni‐base alloys are attacked through defects in the oxide scale which leads to pitting and outgrowth of coke protrusions, after initial internal formation of stable carbides M23C6, M7C3 and MC. A dense oxide layer prevents metal dusting, but formation of a protective Cr‐rich scale must be favored by a fine‐grain microstructure and/or surface deformation, providing fast diffusion paths for Cr. Additional protection is possible by sulfur from the atmosphere, since sulfur adsorbs on metal surfaces and suppresses carburization. Sulfur also interrupts the metal dusting mechanism on iron and steels, causing slow cementite growth. Under conditions where no sulfur addition is possible, the use of high Cr Nickelbase‐alloys is recommended, they are largely protected by an oxide scale and if metal dusting takes place, its rate is much slower than on steels.  相似文献   

5.
Composites of Cr3C2-NiCr provide superior oxidation resistance to WC-Co composites, which has seen them applied extensively to components subjected to combined high temperature erosion and oxidation. This work characterises the variation in oxidation mechanism of thermally sprayed Cr3C2-NiCr composites at 700 °C and 850 °C as a function of heat treatment. Carbide dissolution during spraying increased the Ni alloy Cr concentration, minimising the formation of Ni oxides during oxidation. Compressive growth stresses resulted in ballooning of the oxide over the carbide grains. Carbide nucleation with heat treatment reduced the Ni alloy Cr concentration. The oxidation mechanism of the composite coating changed from being Cr based to that observed for NiCr alloys.  相似文献   

6.
Iron and Fe-Si alloys (1, 2, 3 and 5 wt.% Si) were reacted at 680 °C with a gas mixture of 68% CO, 26% H2 and 6% H2O (aC = 2.9, pO2 = 2 × 10−23 atm). Alloy reaction products consisted of internally precipitated SiO2, an external scale of Fe3C + SiO2 and surface coke deposits containing cementite and silica particles. Coking and metal dusting rates both increased with alloy silicon level. This is proposed to be related to an increase in graphite nucleation sites at Fe3C/SiO2 phase boundaries, and the volume expansion accompanying graphite precipitation.  相似文献   

7.
Ni–Al coating alloys, which are commonly used in gas turbine engines operating in marine environments, are highly susceptible to hot corrosion attack. The effect of alloy composition and exposure conditions on the development of a protective alumina scale, which is important for the hot corrosion resistance of the alloy, and how they affect the transition of alumina from the θ to the α polymorph have been evaluated. A series of Ni–Al model alloys with a base composition of Ni–36 at.% Al, and 5 at.% additions of Cr, Pt and Si were exposed in dry air and in air–10%H2O at 900 °C. The presence of water vapor in the gas led to higher oxidation rates and retarded the θ- to the α-Al2O3 transformation. The oxidation behavior of the alloys and the alumina polymorph which formed differed depending on the alloying element considered. Additions of Cr accelerated the θ to α transformation, while Pt and Si retarded it.  相似文献   

8.
W.M. Lu  K. Zhang  Y. Niu 《Corrosion Science》2008,50(7):1900-1906
The corrosion of five Fe-Cr commercial steels containing 0-18 wt.% Cr at 673-773 K has been studied in a reducing H2-HCl-CO2 atmosphere under a ZnCl2-KCl deposit typical of waste gasification environments. In comparison with the behavior of the same steels in a similar gas mixture without salt deposit, all steels suffered from accelerated corrosion induced by the salt and formed porous scales with poor adherence to the underlying steels. Some Cl was detected close to the steels/scale interface, indicating that Cl-containing species were able to go through the scale down to the metal matrix. Even though the corrosion rates generally decreased with increasing Cr content, the high-Cr stainless steel SS304 was still unable to provide a good corrosion resistance against the ZnCl2-KCl deposit. The reaction mechanisms are discussed on the basis of thermodynamic considerations and of the “active oxidation” model.  相似文献   

9.
A high-performance commercial alumina-forming Ni-base alloy was studied after a 2 years field exposure at 540 °C in a methanol plant with a gas composition of 10-20%CO and 20-40%H2O, with some CO2 and the remainder H2. The same material was also used in laboratory studies performed at 650 °C using a gas mixture with higher CO and lower H2O content; 50%CO + 3%H2O + 47H2 (carbon activity ac = 39). Post-exposure metallographic examinations together with thermodynamic calculations were used to identify and describe the metal dusting processes.A growth mechanism for metal dusting in nickel base alloys, which is independent of metal bulk diffusion, is identified. The process involves a separation of the carbon-saturated metal into a network of discontinuous precipitated carbides and a depleted Ni-austenite matrix followed by selective oxidation of the carbide network. The corrosion product consists of Cr-depleted Ni-particles, Cr-rich oxides and free carbon. The estimated metal dusting corrosion rate in the field exposure was 20-25 μm/year, based on metallography and it was correlated to a theoretical model based on boundary diffusion processes.  相似文献   

10.
T.J. Pan  Y. Niu 《Corrosion Science》2007,49(3):1362-1377
The corrosion of three Fe-xCr alloys (x = 8, 12, 18 wt.%) was examined at 600 °C in reducing atmospheres containing HCl and H2S with two different H2S contents and compared with the behavior of the same materials in H2S-free H2-CO2 and H2-HCl-CO2 mixtures producing similar oxygen and chlorine pressures. Exposure to the low-H2S gas mixture had only a reduced effect on the behavior of Fe-8Cr and Fe-18Cr, but increased significantly the corrosion rate of Fe-12Cr. Increasing the H2S level accelerated the corrosion of all the alloys, but particularly that of Fe-18Cr. In both cases only minor amounts of sulfur and chlorine were present close to the alloy/scale interface. An increase of the Cr content reduced the corrosion rate in both H2S gas mixtures, especially in the range 8-12 wt.% Cr, due to a larger volume fraction of Cr2O3 in the scale. The results have been discussed on the basis of the thermodynamic stability diagrams of the Fe-O-Cl-S and Cr-O-Cl-S systems.  相似文献   

11.
H.T. Ma  C.H. Zhou  L. Wang 《Corrosion Science》2009,51(8):1861-1867
Pure Fe, Cr and Fe-Cr binary alloys were corroded in O2 containing 298 ppm KCl vapour at 750 °C. The corrosion kinetics were determined, and the microstructure and the composition of oxide scales were examined. During corrosion process, KCl vapour reacted with the formed oxide scales and generated Cl2 gas. As Cl2 gas introduced the active oxidation, a multilayer oxide scales consisted of an outmost Fe2O3 layer and an inner Cr2O3 layer formed on the Fe-Cr alloys with lower Cr concentration. In the case of Fe-60Cr or Fe-80Cr alloys, monolayer Cr2O3 formed as the healing oxidation process. However, multilayer Cr2O3 formed on pure Cr.  相似文献   

12.
Samples of 5 high Cr‐alloys were discontinuously exposed for 10,000 hours under severe metal dusting conditions, i. e. in flowing 49%CO‐49%H2‐2%H2O at 650°C. After each of the 11 exposure periods the mass change was determined and any coke removed and weighed. Metallographic cross sections were prepared after about 4,000 h and 10,000 h. The high Cr‐alloys: 1. PM 2000 (Fe‐19%Cr‐5.5%Al‐0.5%Ti‐0.5%Y2O3), 2. Cr‐44%Fe‐5%Al‐0.4%Ti‐0.5%Y2O3, 3. Cr‐50%Ni, 4. Cr‐5%Fe‐1%Y2O3 and 5. porous chromium showed no or only minute metal dusting attack. Compared to the attack on reference samples of Alloy 601 (Ni‐23%Cr‐14%Fe‐1.4%Al), the metal dusting symptoms were negligible on the 5 high Cr‐alloys, minor coking and pitting and no internal carburization was observed. Because of the high Cr‐content, carbon solution and ingress should be minute, and in addition are inhibited by the formation of a chromia scale, as confirmed for four of the Cr‐rich alloys, and formation of an alumina scale on PM 2000. These alloys could be used for parts exposed to severe metal dusting conditions, and in fact, 50Cr‐50Ni has been applied successfully under such conditions.  相似文献   

13.
The oxidation of an Fe-Al alloy containing 3 at.% Al and of four ternary Fe-Cr-Al alloys with the same Al content plus 2, 3, 5 or 10 at.% Cr has been studied in 1 atm O2 at 1000 °C. Both Fe-3Al and Fe-2Cr-3Al formed external iron-rich scales associated with an internal oxidation of Al or of Cr+Al. The addition of 3 at.% Cr to Fe-3Al was able to stop the internal oxidation of Al only on a fraction of the alloy surface covered by scales containing mixtures of the oxides of the three alloy components, but not beneath the iron-rich oxide nodules which covered the remaining alloy surface. Fe-5Cr-3Al formed very irregular external scales where areas covered by a thin protective oxide layer alternated with others covered by thick scales containing mixtures of the oxides of the three alloy components, undergrown by a thin layer rich in Cr and Al, while internal oxidation was completely absent. Conversely, Fe-10Cr-3Al formed very thin, slowly-growing external Al2O3scales, providing an example of third-element effect (TEE). However, the TEE due to the Cr addition to Fe-3Al was not directly associated with a prevention of the internal oxidation of Al, but rather with the inhibition of the growth of external scales containing iron oxides. This behavior has been interpreted on the basis of a qualitative oxidation map for ternary Fe-Cr-Al alloys taking into account the existence of a complete solid solubility between Cr2O3 and Al2O3.  相似文献   

14.
Nanocrystalline (NC) Ni–Cr coatings, containing 5, 10 and 20 wt% Cr were prepared using magnetron sputtering deposition, on the substrates of the same composition materials. These alloys were tested in 47 %CO–47 %H2–6 %H2O for 50 h at 650 °C. Weight gain kinetics showed that increasing Cr content decreased the carburisation kinetics. After reaction, the NC coatings containing high Cr (10 and 20 wt%) remained, with the formation of surface and inner Cr2O3 and internal precipitates of fine carbon deposits for Ni–10Cr and Cr7C3 for Ni–20Cr. In contrast, the Ni–5Cr coated sample suffered a severe metal dusting with whole coating scale was destroyed completely. Preoxidation of these alloys and their miro-grained counterparts was conducted before metal dusting. It was found that preoxidation significantly reduced weight gain kinetics. This reduction effect is more significant for NC Ni–Cr alloys than the micro-grained alloys. The critical chromium concentration for protective chromia scale formation and for internal chromium carbide formation were discussed using Wagner’s analysis and product solubility calculation, respectively. The effects of preoxidation and grain size on oxide formation and carburisation/metal dusting were also discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Metal dusting   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Metal dusting is a catastrophic carburization of steels which leads to disintegration of the material to a mixture of powdery carbon and metal particles leaving pits and grooves. The phenomenon was simulated by carburization of low-and high-alloy steels in CO-H2-H2O mixtures at carbon activities > 1 in the temperature range 600–700°C. The occurance of an unstable carbide M3C (M=Fe, Ni), as an intermediate in metal dusting, was proven—the reaction sequence involves over saturation of the metal matrix with carbon, M3C formation at the surface, subsequent decomposition of the M3C layer M3C3 M+ C, leading to carbon with interspersed metal particles which act as catalysts for additional carbon deposition from the gas atmosphere. With increasing Ni content in Fe-Ni alloys, typical metal dusting is suppressed, but another mode of deterioration was observed, involving graphite growth on the grain boundaries. The high-alloy, chromia-forming alloys showed metal dusting only when chromia formation was suppressed by electropolishing the materials.  相似文献   

16.
P91 ferritic‐martensitic steel, 17Cr–13Ni and alloy 800 austenitic stainless steels and Inconel 617 alloy have been aluminised to form Fe2Al5, (Fe,Ni)Al and Ni2Al3 aluminide coatings. These alloys and their corresponding coatings were subjected to corrosion in air by 50:50 mol/mol K2SO4/KCl deposits at 650 °C for 300 h. With the exception of the Inconel 617 alloy, significant metal losses (>180 µm) were recorded. These losses were planar for P91 alloy but involved internal corrosion for the two austenitic steels. The (Fe,Ni)Al and NiAl coatings on the austenitic steels and the Inconel 617 alloy were significantly corroded via intergranular and internal chloridation–sulphidation–oxidation. In contrast, the Fe2Al5 coating on the P91 alloy coating was virtually unattacked. For the alloys, the relative extents of corrosion damage can be explained in terms of the stability and volatility of metal chlorides formed. For the coatings, STEM/EDS analyses enable clear linkages to be made between the presence and number of Cr‐rich particles on coating grain boundaries and the corrosion damage observed for the coatings.  相似文献   

17.
Fe-30Mn-6Si, Fe-30Mn-6Si-5Cr and Fe-13Mn-5Si-12Cr-5Ni shape memory alloys were prepared by a VIM technique. The various corrosion tests were conducted to investigate the corrosion behaviors of these alloys. Experimental results show that in 3.5% NaCl solution, the Fe-13Mn-5Si-12Cr-5Ni alloy had the best chemical corrosion resistance, whereas the Fe-30Mn-6Si-5Cr alloy was locally attacked, forming many corrosion pits after immersion test. In addition, the detachment of the corrosion product covering the Fe-30Mn-6Si alloy caused an abrupt increase in the weight loss. After 2 h of heat treatment at 1000 °C, the corrosion potential of the Fe-30Mn-6Si alloy increased due to the formation of α-ferrite, while the Fe-30Mn-6Si-5Cr alloy became more active. In the stress-corrosion cracking test, the Fe-13Mn-5Si-12Cr-5Ni alloy, having the highest fracture stress in the atmosphere among these alloys, exhibited the largest decrease in fracture stress in the saturated H2S solution due to the existence of α-martensite.  相似文献   

18.
Two nanocrystalline two-phase Cu-Ni-Cr alloys, both prepared by mechanical alloying and containing about 20 at.% Cr but with different Ni contents (40 and 20 wt.%, respectively), have been oxidized in 1 atm O2 at 700-800 °C. Their oxidation behavior has been compared with that of two cast alloys of the same composition, already studied previously, to examine the effects of a large reduction of the size of the individual phase grains and particles. The nanophase alloy with 40 wt.% Ni formed a flat external layer of chromia of regular thickness, while the corresponding cast alloy produced a very irregular chromia layer, often protruding deeply into the alloy, only after an initial stage of rather fast corrosion involving also copper and nickel, associated with some degree of internal oxidation. By oxidation at 700 °C the nanophase alloy with 20 wt.% Ni formed an irregular chromia layer associated with low corrosion rates. The corresponding cast alloy formed complex scales containing Cu, Ni and Cr oxides, extending into the alloy in the form of large pegs, even though a very irregular and discontinuous innermost chromia layer was still able to produce low corrosion rates. On the contrary, at 800 °C both alloys formed complex scales containing mixtures of the oxides of the three metal components. However, the scales grown on the cast alloy were much more irregular in thickness and formed large protrusions into the alloy. In spite of this, the corrosion kinetics of the nanophase 20 wt.% Ni alloy at 800 °C were more irregular and, except for an initial stage, less protective than that of the cast alloy with the same composition.  相似文献   

19.
Exposures were conducted of iron, nickel, ferritic 1‐18%Cr steels, austenitic 18%Cr‐9%Ni‐ and 20%Cr‐31%Ni‐steels and a 16%Cr‐Ni‐base alloy at 500°C in He‐30%H2O and 70%H2O‐30%NH3, to compare the corrosion behaviour of these materials in water vapor as in conventional power plants with their behaviour in a NH3‐H2O mixture, i.e. under conditions of the “Kalina‐cycle”. After 50 h in He‐H2O generally a dense oxide scale had grown on iron and on the steels, whereas the scale grown in NH3‐H2O was porous, due to initial formation of the γ′‐ and ε‐nitrides, which are converted to Fe3O4 later. The porous scale allows internal nitridation of the Cr‐steels, nitrogen is transferred into the metal phase and reacts to finely dispersed CrN‐precipitates. This process causes stresses in the material and formation of cracks. The higher the Cr‐content of the material, the worse is the damage of the materials surface. Least corrosion damage occurs for iron and the 1%CrMo‐steel, however, the inward penetration of nitridation is greatest, and after 5 years on the low Cr‐steel a layer of about 15 mm would be embrittled by internal nitridation, formation of γ′ and ε‐nitride layers and external oxidation. Nickel is strongly damaged by intermediate formation of instable Ni3N, which causes internal stresses and cracking, but also pore formation by its decomposition. The surface region of the 15%Cr‐Ni‐base alloy is also destroyed by internal nitridation and extrusion of Ni‐particles, while for this material the inward penetration of nitridation is relatively slow due to the low solubility and diffusivity of N in Ni and Ni‐alloys.  相似文献   

20.
A study of the effect of Cr content on the microstructure and isothermal oxidation behaviour of four alloys from the Nb-Cr-W system has been performed. Selection of specific alloy compositions has been based on the ternary isothermal sections. Oxidation experiments were conducted in air at 900 and 1300 °C for 24 h under isothermal conditions. Weight gain per unit area as function of the temperature has been used to evaluate the oxidation resistance. The phases present in the alloys and the oxide scales were characterized by XRD, SEM, and EDS. Microstructure consists of Nb solid solution and NbCr2, Laves phase. The oxidation kinetics follows a parabolic behaviour at 1300 °C; the addition of 30% Cr resulted in the significant reduction of the parabolic oxidation rate. At 900 °C, alloys with higher Cr content exhibit higher oxidation rates in comparison to alloys with lower Cr content. The oxidation products are a mixture of CrNbO4 and Nb2O5 and the amount of each oxide present in the mixture is related to the intermetallic phase content and the oxidation temperature. The characterization results delineate the effect of the Cr content on the oxidation mechanisms of these alloys that represent a promising base for high-temperature alloy development.  相似文献   

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