The Effect of H-2 and H2O on the Oxidation of 304L-Stainless Steel at 600 A degrees C: General Behaviour (Part I)
Journal article, 2016

The effect of p(H2O) and p(H-2) on the oxidation of 304L stainless steel at 600 A degrees C has been investigated in the present study. The samples were analysed by means of X-ray diffraction, Auger spectroscopy, and scanning electron microscopy equipped with energy dispersive spectroscopy. The results showed that at fixed p(H-2), the corrosion rate increased considerably with increasing p(H2O). At fixed p(H2O), the corrosion rate decreased slightly with increasing p(H-2). Duplex oxide scales formed during the exposure in all environments. The outer and inner layer consisted of Fe3O4 and (Fe, Cr)(3)O-4, respectively. The latter was mainly in the form of internal oxidation. The Cr-rich oxide formation was observed at the initial oxidation process before oxide breakdown. The Auger analysis also suggested the presence of Cr-rich oxide layer just after the breakaway oxidation. The results indicated that the rate-determining step in the corrosion attack is surface controlled or diffusion controlled through an oxide layer with fixed thickness over time.

oxide

Low oxygen activity environment

Hydrogen

304l

High temperature corrosion

steam oxidation

breakaway oxidation

water-vapor

Stainless steels

high-temperature oxidation

chromium

austenitic stainless-steel

9-percent-cr steels

corrosion

Water vapor

Author

Hamed Hoseini Hooshyar

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Torbjörn Jonsson

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

J. Hall

Dalarna university

Jan-Erik Svensson

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Lars-Gunnar Johansson

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Jesper Liske

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Oxidation of Metals

0030-770X (ISSN) 1573-4889 (eISSN)

Vol. 85 3-4 321-342

Subject Categories

Materials Chemistry

DOI

10.1007/s11085-015-9597-5

More information

Latest update

4/1/2019 9