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Uncertainty Quantification of Environmentally Assisted Stress Corrosion Cracking in Used Fuel Canisters (Status Report)

O'Brien, Christopher J.; Alexander, Chris; Bryan, Charles R.; Schindelholz, Eric J.; Dingreville, Remi P.

This study was initiated to quantify and characterize the uncertainty associated with the degradation mechanisms impacting normal dry storage operations for used nuclear fuel (UNF) and normal conditions of transport in support of the Spent Fuel and Waste Science & Technology Campaign (SFWST) and its effectiveness to rank the data needs and parameters of interest. This report describes the technical basis and guidance resulting from the development of software to perform uncertainty quantification (UQ) by developing and describing a holistic model that integrates the various processes controlling Atmospheric Stress Corrosion Cracking (ASCC) in the specific context of Interim Spent Fuel Storage Installations (ISFSIs). These processes include the daily and annual cycles of temperature and humidity associated with the environment, the deposition of chloride-containing aerosol particles, pit formation, pit-to-crack transition, and crack propagation.

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Degradation processes and mechanisms of PV wires and connectors

Durability and Reliability of Polymers and Other Materials in Photovoltaic Modules

Lokanath, Sumanth V.; Skarbek, Bryan; Schindelholz, Eric J.

Photovoltaic (PV) power plants and their constituent components, by virtue of their application, are exposed to some of the harshest outdoor terrestrial environments. Most equipment is subject directly to the environment and myriad stresses (micro and macro environment). Other aspects including local site conditions, construction variability and quality, and maintenance practices also influence the likelihood of such hazards. Many discrete components, including PV modules, wires, connectors, wire management devices, combiner boxes, protection devices, inverters, and transformers, make up the PV generation system. While there are abundant data that illustrate PV modules and PV inverters to be the major contributors of PV system failures, the mentioned data illustrate the importance of minimizing failures in the often ignored components such as PV connectors, PV wires (both above and below ground), wire splices, fuses, fuse holders, fuse holder enclosures, and wire management devices. With the exception of PV fuses, these components predominantly use polymeric materials. Therefore, it is crucial to understand the typical materials used in components, degradation processes and mechanisms leading to component failure, and their impact on system performance or failure. It further provides some practical considerations, approaches, and methods in addressing the problems with practical solutions in the design to assure the performance of the PV plant over the intended design lifetime.

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Stability of sea-salt deliquescent brines on heated surfaces of SNF dry storage canisters

International High-Level Radioactive Waste Management 2019, IHLRWM 2019

Bryan, Charles R.; Schindelholz, Eric J.; Knight, Andrew W.; Taylor, Jason M.; Dingreville, Remi P.

For long-term storage, spent nuclear fuel (SNF) is placed in dry storage systems, commonly consisting of welded stainless steel canisters enclosed in ventilated overpacks. Choride-induced stress corrosion cracking (CISCC) of these canisters may occur due to the deliquescence of sea-salt aerosols as the canisters cool. Current experimental and modeling efforts to evaluate canister CISCC assume that the deliquescent brines, once formed, persist on the metal surface, without changing chemical or physical properties. Here we present data that show that magnesium chloride rich-brines, which form first as the canisters cool and sea-salts deliquesce, are not stable at elevated temperatures, degassing HCl and converting to solid carbonates and hydroxychloride phases, thus limiting conditions for corrosion. Moreover, once pitting corrosion begins on the metal surface, oxygen reduction in the cathode region surrounding the pits produces hydroxide ions, increasing the pH under some experimental conditions, leads to precipitation of magnesium hydroxychloride hydrates. Because magnesium carbonates and hydroxychloride hydrates are less deliquescent than magnesium chloride, precipitation of these compounds causes a reduction in the brine volume on the metal surface, potentially limiting the extent of corrosion. If taken to completion, such reactions may lead to brine dry-out, and cessation of corrosion.

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FY18 Status Report: SNL Research into Stress Corrosion Cracking of SNF Interim Storage Canisters

Bryan, Charles R.; Schindelholz, Eric J.

This progress report describes work done in FY18 at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) to assess the localized corrosion performance of container/cask materials used in the interim storage of spent nuclear fuel (SNF). The work focuses on stress corrosion cracking (SCC), the only mechanism by which a through-wall crack could potentially form in a canister outer wall over time intervals that are shorter than possible dry storage times. Work in FY18 continued several studies initiated in FY17 that are aimed at refining the understanding of the chemical and physical environment on canister surfaces, and evaluating the relationship between chemical and physical environment and the form and extent of corrosion that occurs. The SNL canister environment work focused on evaluating the stability of sea-salt deliquescent brines on the heated canister surface; an additional opportunity to analyze dusts sampled from an inservice spent nuclear fuel storage canister also arose. The SNL corrosion work focused predominantly on pitting corrosion, a necessary precursor for SCC, and process of pit-to-crack transition. SNL is collaborating with several university partners to investigate SCC crack growth experimentally, providing guidance for design and interpretation of experiments. The scope of these efforts targets near-marine Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation environments which are generally considered to be most aggressive for pitting and SCC. Work to define the chemical and physical environment that could develop on storage canister surfaces in near-marine environments included experiments to evaluate the thermal stability of magnesium chloride brines, representative of the first brines to form when sea-salts deliquesce, with the specific goal of understanding and interpreting results of sea-salt and magnesium chloride corrosion experiments carried out under accelerated conditions. The experiments showed that magnesium chloride brines, and by extension, low RH sea-salt deliquescent brines, are not stable at elevated temperatures, losing chloride via degassing of HC1 and conversion to Mg-hydroxychlorides and carbonates. The experiments were carried out on an inert substrate to eliminate the effects of corrosion reactions, simulating brine stabilities in the absence of, or prior to, corrosion. Moreover, analysis of salts recovered from actively corroding metal samples shows that corrosion also supports or drives conversion of magnesium chloride or sea-salt brines to less deliquescent salts. This process has significant implications on corrosion, as the secondary phases are less deliquescent than magnesium chloride; the conversion reaction results in decreases in brine volume, and potentially results in brine dry-out. The deliquescence properties of these reaction products will be a topic of active research in FY19.

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Innovative Technologies for Optical Detection of Stress Corrosion Cracks

Bryan, Charles R.; Pfeifer, Kent B.; Buerger, Stephen B.; Schindelholz, Eric J.

Stress corrosion cracks (SCC) represent a major concern for the structural integrity of engineered metal structures. In hazardous or restricted-access environments, remote detection of corrosion or SCC frequently relies on visual methods; however, with standard VT-1 visual inspection techniques, probabilities of SCC detection are low. Here, we develop and evaluate an improved optical sensor for SCC in restricted access-environments by combining a robotically controlled camera/fiber-optic based probe with software-based super-resolution imaging (SRI) techniques to increase image quality and detection of SCC. SRI techniques combine multiple images taken at different viewing angles, locations, or rotations, to produce a single higher- resolution composite image. We have created and tested an imaging system and algorithms for combining optimized, controlled camera movements and super- resolution imaging, improving SCC detection probabilities, and potentially revolutionizing techniques for remote visual inspections of any type.

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Extraordinary Corrosion Protection from Polymer-Clay Nanobrick Wall Thin Films

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Schindelholz, Eric J.; Spoerke, Erik D.; Nguyen, Hai-Duy A.; Qin, Shuang; Grunlan, Jaime C.

Metals across all industries demand anticorrosion surface treatments and drive a continual need for high-performing and low-cost coatings. Here we demonstrate polymer-clay nanocomposite thin films as a new class of transparent conformal barrier coatings for protection in corrosive atmospheres. Films assembled via layer-by-layer deposition, as thin as 90 nm, are shown to reduce copper corrosion rates by >1000× in an aggressive H2S atmosphere. These multilayer nanobrick wall coatings hold promise as high-performing anticorrosion treatment alternatives to costlier, more toxic, and less scalable thin films, such as graphene, hexavalent chromium, or atomic-layer-deposited metal oxides.

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Electrochemical aspects of copper atmospheric corrosion in the presence of sodium chloride

Electrochimica Acta

Schindelholz, Eric J.; Cong, Hongbo; Jove Colon, Carlos F.; Li, Shengxi; Ohlhausen, J.A.; Moffat, Harry K.

Here, this study describes the evolving state of electrolyte and corrosion processes associated with sodium chloride on copper at the initial stage of corrosion and the critical implications of this behavior on controlling kinetics and damage distributions. Sodium chloride droplets were placed on copper in humid conditions and the resulting electrolyte properties, corrosion products and damage were characterized over time using time-lapse imaging, micro Raman spectroscopy, TOF-SIMS and optical profilometry. Within minutes of NaCl droplet placement, NaOH-rich films resultant from oxygen reduction advanced stepwise from the droplets, leaving behind concentric trenching attack patterns suggestive of moving anode-cathode pairs at the alkaline film front. Corrosion attack under these spreading alkaline films was up to 10x greater than under the original NaCl drops. Furthermore, solid Cu2Cl(OH)3 shells formed over the surface of the NaCl drops within hours of exposure. Thermodynamic modeling along with immersed electrochemical experiments in simulated droplet and films electrolytes were used to rationalize this behavior and build a description of the rapidly evolving corroding system.

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The role of microstructure and surface finish on the corrosion of selective laser melted 304L

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Schaller, Rebecca F.; Mishra, Ajit; Rodelas, Jeffrey R.; Taylor, Jason M.; Schindelholz, Eric J.

The corrosion behavior of selective laser melted (SLM) 304L was investigated and compared to conventional wrought 304L in aqueous chloride and acidic solutions. Through immersed electrochemical testing and exposure in acidic solutions, the SLM 304L exhibited superior pitting resistance in the polished state compared to wrought 304L. However, the surface condition of the SLM material had a great impact on its corrosion resistance, with the grit-blasted condition exhibiting severely diminished pitting resistance. Local scale, capillary micro-electrochemical and scanning electrochemical microscopy investigations, identified porosity as a contributing factor to decreased corrosion resistance. Preferential corrosion attack was not observed to be related to the characteristic underlying cellular microstructure produced through SLM processing. This study highlights the effects of SLM microstructural features on corrosion resistance, specifically the substantial influence of surface finish on SLM corrosion behavior and the need for development and optimization of processing techniques to improve surface finish.

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Results 26–50 of 90
Results 26–50 of 90