Nuclear Engineering and Technology | 2019

The corrosion of aluminium alloy and release of intermetallic particles in nuclear reactor emergency core coolant: Implications for clogging of sump strainers

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Clogging of sump strainers that filter the recirculation water in containment after a loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA) seriously impedes the continued cooling of nuclear reactor cores. In experiments examining the corrosion of aluminium alloy 6061, a common material in containment equipment, in borated solutions simulating the water chemistry of sump water after a LOCA, we found that Fe-bearing intermetallic particles, which were initially buried in the Al matrix, were progressively exposed as corrosion continued. Their cathodic nature vis-a-vis the Al matrix provoked continuous trenching around them until they were finally released into the test solution. Such particles released from Al alloy components in a reactor containment after a LOCA will be transported to the sump entrance with the recirculation flow and trapped by the debris bed that typically forms on the strainer surface, potentially aggravating strainer clogging. These Fe-bearing intermetallic particles, many of which had a rod or thin strip-like geometry, were identified to be mainly the cubic phase αc-Al(Fe,Mn)Si with an average size of about 2.15\xa0μm; 11.5\xa0g of particles with a volume of about 3.2\xa0cm3 would be released with the dissolution of every 1\xa0kg 6061 aluminium alloy.

Volume 51
Pages 1345-1354
DOI 10.1016/J.NET.2019.02.012
Language English
Journal Nuclear Engineering and Technology

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