91做厙

Skip to main content
SHARE
Publication

Impact of Hydrogen Combustion on the Oxidation-induced Degradation of Heavy-duty Diesel Engine Piston Materials...

by Rishi R Pillai, Dean T Pierce, Tracie M Lowe, James A Haynes
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
AMPP Annual Conference and Expo 2025
Publication Date
Page Numbers
1 to 14
Publisher Location
Texas, United States of America
Conference Name
AMPP Annual Conference and Expo 2025
Conference Location
Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
AMPP
Conference Date
-

High temperature ferritic-martensitic steels are candidate materials for heavy-duty diesel engine pistons. The envisioned transition to hydrogen blended fuels is expected to alter the post-combustion atmosphere in the engines, primarily resulting in a higher water vapor content (> 20 vol%) and potentially higher exhaust gas temperatures. The oxidation resistance of existing and newly developed alloys will be a critical life-limiting mechanism under these conditions. In the present work, the oxidation behavior of candidate piston alloys was evaluated in air+10 vol.% H2O and air+30 vol.% H2O at 700簞C. Thermal cyclic (1h cycle) exposures were conducted for two variants of commercial UNSS42200 ferritic-martensitic steel and two developmental alloy steels for up to 300h. The developmental alloys each have similar compositions but with one containing elevated Cu levels of 3 wt.%, A significant reduction in resistance to breakaway oxidation was observed for the commercial alloys in the higher water vapor atmosphere. Microstructural characterization (optical metallography, scanning electron microscopy and electron microprobe analysis) revealed the formation of thick Fe-rich oxides even for the high Cr (~12 wt.%) steels after an initial stage of protective oxidation with MnCr-rich spinels. The impact of the evaporation-induced loss of Cr on the time and temperature dependent compositional changes in the alloys was correlated with experimental findings. For the developmental alloys, Cu additions appear to play a role in significantly reducing oxidation kinetics in air+30 vol.% H2O at 700簞C.