Role of oxygen diffusion at Ni/Cr$_2$O$_3$ interface in intergranular oxidation of Ni-Cr alloy
ORAL
Abstract
Certain Ni-Cr alloys used in nuclear systems experience intergranular oxidation and stress corrosion cracking when exposed to high-temperature water leading to their degradation and unexpected failure. To develop a mechanistic understanding of grain boundary oxidation processes, we proposed a mesoscale metal alloy oxidation model that combines quantum Density Functional Theory (DFT) with mesoscopic Poisson-Nernst-Planck/classical DFT. This framework encompasses the chemical specificity of elementary diffusion processes and mesoscale reactive dynamics, and allows modeling oxidation processes on experimentally relevant length scales from first principles. As a proof of concept, a preliminary model was previously employed that limited oxygen diffusion pathways to those through the oxide phase and did not allow oxygen diffusion in the alloy or across oxide/alloy interfaces. In this work, we expand the model to include oxygen diffusion pathways along Ni/Cr$_2$O$_3$ interfaces and demonstrate the increasing importance of such pathways for intergranular oxidation of Ni-Cr alloys with high Cr content.
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Authors
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Bharat Medasani
PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIONAL LAB
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Maria Sushko
PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIONAL LAB
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Daniel Schreiber
PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIONAL LAB
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Kevin Rosso
PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIONAL LAB
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Stephen Bruemmer
PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIONAL LAB