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Microstructure and hydrothermal corrosion behavior of NITE-SiC with various sintering additives in LWR coolant environments...

by Chad M Parish, Kurt A Terrani, Takaaki Koyanagi, Yutai Kato, Young-jin Kim
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Journal of the European Ceramic Society
Publication Date
Page Numbers
1261 to 1279
Volume
37
Issue
4

Nano-infiltration and transient eutectic phase (NITE) sintering was developed for fabrication of nuclear grade SiC composites. We produced monolithic SiC ceramics using NITE sintering, as candidates for accident-tolerant fuels in light-water reactors (LWRs). In this work, we exposed three different NITE chemistries (yttria-alumina [YA], ceria-zirconia-alumina [CZA], and yttria-zirconia-alumina [YZA]) to autoclave conditions simulating LWR coolant loops. The YZA was most corrosion resistant, followed by CZA, with YA being worst. High-resolution elemental analysis using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) X-ray mapping combined with multivariate statistical analysis (MVSA) datamining helped explain the differences in corrosion. YA-NITE lost all Al from the corroded region and the ytttria reformed into blocky precipitates. The CZA material lost all Al from the corroded area, and the YZA − which suffered the least corrosion −retained some Al in the corroded region. The results indicate that the YZA-NITE SiC is most resistant to hydrothermal corrosion in the LWR environment.