Mechanical Engineering Journal (Aug 2021)
Heating impact on corrosion mechanism of carbon steel surrounded by bentonite
Abstract
The long-term safety of geological disposal of radioactive waste is studied through several simulations. Before underground disposal, radioactive waste is stored for 30 to 50 years at facilities near nuclear power plants to cool it down to around 100 degrees Celsius. It is then placed in steel canisters surrounded by artificial materials such as bentonite and concrete. To determine the long-term safety and stability of this disposal method, we’ve studied the corrosion rate of the steel canisters under different conditions using electro-chemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). This paper describes the corrosion of the carbon steel and elucidates the corroded condition using EIS measurement. EIS was adopted to estimate the corrosion condition from the impedance frequency characteristic. In our experiment, samples of bentonite and carbon steel were Kunigel V1 compacted to 1.37 Mg/m3 dry density with several different water contents, and SM400 as a low carbon steel. An electric heater was set inside the steel canister to maintain the temperature at 100 degrees Celsius. This model was made to a scale of around 1/120 as a current concept of a vertical disposal plan and reproduced the enclosed situation after underground emplacement of the radioactive waste. During heating, we conducted EIS measurements and set this data result as an equivalent circuit. We noted some different trends of impedance frequency characteristic depending on the bentonite’s water content and the heating time. From this result, we estimated the corrosion condition to analyze the corrosion products.
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