• Journal of Inorganic Materials
  • Vol. 36, Issue 10, 1097 (2021)
Yiming LEI1、2, Jie ZHANG1、*, Guanghai BAI3, Yanwei ZHANG3, Xiaohui WANG1, and Jingyang WANG1
Author Affiliations
  • 11. Shenyang National Laboratory for Materials Science, Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110016, China
  • 22. School of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Science and Technology of China, Shenyang 110016, China
  • 33. Life Management Technology Center, Suzhou Nuclear Power Research Institute, China Nuclear Power Technology Research Institute, Suzhou 215004, China
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    DOI: 10.15541/jim20210029 Cite this Article
    Yiming LEI, Jie ZHANG, Guanghai BAI, Yanwei ZHANG, Xiaohui WANG, Jingyang WANG. Influence of Al Content on Oxidation Resistance of Phase-pure Ti2AlC under Simulated Loss-of-coolant Accident Conditions [J]. Journal of Inorganic Materials, 2021, 36(10): 1097 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    To tailor Ti2AlC coatings for the applications in accident tolerant fuels, the oxidation of near-stoichiometric and Al-lean Ti2AlC was investigated in Ar-41% H2O atmosphere in 1000-1200 ℃. The oxidation kinetics of phase-pure Ti2AlC in high-temperature water vapor varied from parabolic to linear rate law with Al content decreasing. Insufficient Al content could not sustain the growth of continuous alumina scales, resulting in formation of thick unprotective TiO2-based scales. The formation of thin and protective Al2O3 scale for Ti2AlC with stoichiometric composition effectively inhibited the inward diffusion of water vapor. For the application of protective coatings on Zr-based cladding, stoichiometric Ti2AlC is expected to protect cladding from fast oxidation and improve the accident tolerance in the current light water reactors.

    The development of accident tolerant fuel (ATF) have been launched worldwide to enhance accident tolerance in light water reactors[1,2]. ATFs, in comparison with the standard UO2-Zr system, can provide larger safety margins by reducing the oxidation rate of Zr-based alloy cladding in high temperature water vapor and increasing the coping time after a loss of coolant accident (LOCA) scenario. In a design-basis LOCA, the maximum oxidation allowed to the zirconium alloy is 17% of the tube wall thickness, which takes 20 min at 1100 ℃ and only 8 min at 1200 ℃[3]. A prospective solution is the substitution of Zr alloys with advanced cladding materials or use of protective coatings, which is meant to provide short-term additional protection to the zirconium alloy cladding at high temperature. Surface-modified zircaloy cladding are regarded as a competitive concept with the merits of convenience and economics[4,5].

    The basic prerequisite requirement of coating candidates for ATF is their resistance to high-temperature water vapor oxidation. Up to now, Cr-coated cladding was reported to perform good high temperature water vapor oxidation resistance, owing to the formation of a protective Cr2O3 scales[6,7]. Al-containing MAX phase, especially Ti2AlC, is considered as another promising candidate, which exhibits outstanding oxidation resistance at high temperature, due to the formation of a dense and adherent Al2O3 scale[8,9,10]. Under water vapor containing environment, Al2O3 shows higher stability, for instance, the weight loss rate is two orders of degree lower than that of Cr2O3 at 1200 ℃[11,12]. However, it is challenging for Ti2AlC coating to obtain a continuous and compact Al2O3 layer during the oxidation process and therefore maintain the same high temperature oxidation resistance as bulk materials. Tang et al.[13] demonstrated that magnetron sputtered TiC/Ti2AlC coating can provide sufficient protection of the Zry-4 alloy at 800 ℃ for 150 min, and multilayer oxide scale (Al2O3+TiO2/Al2O3/ TiO2) was observed after oxidation. The formation of triple oxide structure was also reported by Li et al.[14] for post-annealed Ti2AlC coating after oxidation at 1000 and 1200 ℃, which can be attributed to the loss of Al content for inward diffusion during the oxidation. The chemical composition, especially Al content in Ti2AlC, influences the phase composition and structure of the oxide scale formed on ceramic. Li et al.[15] reported that the sufficient outward flux of Al was necessary for the steady growth of alumina scale on Ti3AlC2 at high temperature. Thus, the performance of Ti2AlC with specific Al content during a hypothetical LOCA scenario should be clarified. It was reported that defective Ti2AlC can sustain phase stability with the ability to accommodate Al vacancies[16]. Ti2Al0.87C coating was obtained by cathodic arc evaporation, while minority content of TiC was apparent when Al content further decreased. Frodelius et al.[17] yielded a film stoichiometry of Ti2Al0.8C by magnetron sputtering, which enabled the growth of both Ti2AlC and TiC. Thus, Ti2Al0.87C exhibits the lowest Al content in the single- phase Ti2AlC coating. In this work, near-stoichiometric Ti2Al1.02C and Al-lean Ti2Al0.88C are synthesized, and the kinetic rate law for water vapor oxidation of Ti2AlC material in 1000-1200 ℃ is investigated. The influence of Al content on the oxidation mechanism of single- phase Ti2AlC is further discussed, which can provide an instruction to the design of protective coating for the applications in ATFs.

    1 Experimental

    In this study, fully dense pellets including near- stoichiometric and Al-lean titanium aluminum carbides were synthesized by hot pressing at 1400 ℃. The mixing ratio for Ti, Al and C elemental powders was set as 2.00 : 1.05 : 1.00 and 2.00 : 0.90 : 1.00, aiming at achieving near-stoichiometric and Al-lean Ti2AlC ceramics, respectively. Detailed description of the synthesis process could be found in previous literature[18]. The specimen with dimension of 10 mm×10 mm×1 mm was cut from the as-sintered bulk pellet, then ground to 2000 grit SiC paper, polished to a 1 μm finish and degreased in acetone. Continuous weight change of Ti2AlC with two Al contents oxidized in water vapor at 1000-1200 ℃ was monitored by Setsys evolution TGA (Setaram, France) with an accuracy of ±4×10-7 g. Specimens were suspended by Pt wire and heated to the desired temperatures at a rate of 15 ℃·min-1. Water vapor was generated by an automated wet gas generator, Wetsys (Setaram, France). Ar-41% H2O (41 kPa water vapor with Ar) atmosphere was maintained to simulate LOCA condition, and the entire experimental setup was heated above the dew point of the corresponding humidity level.

    The Al content in the Ti2AlC pellets was quantitatively measured by electron probe micro-analyzed (EPMA, EPMA-1610, Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan). The phase composition of as-synthesized and oxidized samples was identified by X-ray diffraction (XRD) with Cu Kα radiation (Rigaku D/max 2400, Japan). SUPRA 35 scanning electron microscope (SEM, LEO, Oberkochen, Germany) equipped with an energy-dispersive spectroscope (EDS) was used for the surface and cross section microstructure observation.

    2 Results and discussion

    The chemical composition of two as-synthesized bulk pellets is shown in Table 1. Al atomic content is determined to be (25.61±0.60)% and (22.42±0.86)% for near-stoichiometric and Al-lean samples, respectively. Compared with the as-mixed powders, approximately 3% loss of Al content is detected, which is attributed to the evaporation of aluminum during the sintering process[19]. Consequently, near-stoichiometric and Al-lean samples are formulated as Ti2Al1.02C and Ti2Al0.88C, respectively. Fig. 1 shows the XRD patterns of as-synthesized bulk pellets with two different Al contents. In both cases, Ti2AlC (PDF#29-0095) is the only phase detected, and no extra peaks are apparent. The characteristic diffraction peaks of Ti2Al1.02C near-stoichiometric sample (002) planes located at around 2θ=12.94°, and the lattice constant c of near-stoichiometric sample is determined to be 1.367 nm, which is close to 1.362 nm as reported for stoichiometric Ti2AlC in previous literature[9, 20-21]. With the Al content decreasing, XRD peaks shift to the higher angle, indicating that Al-lean sample exhibits a decreased lattice constant c of 1.358 nm. According to the correlation between Al content and lattice parameters characterized by Wang et al.[16], lattice parameter c for Al-lean sample is estimated to be 1.356 nm, which agrees well with our results. Moreover, lattice constant a remains unchanged for Ti2AlC with two different Al contents. Ti2AlC can be described as an alternate stacking of Ti2C and Al atomic planes along the c direction, and the lattice constant a is dominated by the Ti2C slab, which is stable and less disturbed by Al content[16].

    SampleAtomic percent of Ti/%Atomic percent of Al/%Atomic percent of C/%Composition
    Near-stoichiometric(50.25±0.19)(25.61±0.60)(24.13±0.61)Ti2Al1.02C
    Al-lean(50.68±0.19)(22.42±0.86)(25.90±0.67)Ti2Al0.88C

    Table 1.

    Elemental composition of near-stoichiometric and Al-lean samples

    XRD patterns of near-stoichiometric and Al-lean samples

    Figure .XRD patterns of near-stoichiometric and Al-lean samples

    The oxidation behavior of near-stoichiometric and Al-lean samples in Ar-41% H2O atmosphere was studied at 1000-1200 ℃ to evaluate the oxidation resistance under LOCA conditions. In the experimental atmosphere, the measured weight gain of Zry-4 alloys is close to the predictions by Cathcart-Pawel (C-P) model, which is proposed to describe the oxidation behavior of Zircaloys in hypothetical LOCA scenario[22]. Fig. 2(a) shows the weight gain per unit surface area as a function of time for Ti2AlC with two different Al contents at 1200 ℃, and the weight gain of Zry-4 alloy is also presented for comparison. The mass gain of Ti2Al0.88C and Ti2Al1.02C is 1269 and 27 mg/dm2, respectively, which decreases by a factor of three and two orders of magnitude compared to that of Zry-4 alloy (4167 mg/dm2). Fig. 2(b-d) shows the oxidation kinetics of Al-lean and near-stoichiometric samples oxidized at 1000, 1100 and 1200 ℃. Al-lean sample follows the linear rate law, indicating that the rate-limiting step is the reaction between Ti2Al0.88C and water vapor. The continueous oxidation during its exposure in high-temperature water vapor results in relatively large weight gains. While oxidation kinetics for near-stoichiometric sample obeys parabolic law. According to the Wagner’s theory[23], the scales on Ti2Al1.02C are protective to the underlying substrate from further oxidation, and the rate-limiting mechanism is diffusion controlled. Different oxidation mechanism is described for Ti2AlC bulk ceramics with two Al contents, and near-stoichiometric sample shows better oxidation resistance.

    Weight gain per unit surface area as a function of oxidation time for (a) Zr cladding, Al-lean and near-stoichiometric samples oxidized at 1200 ℃, (b) Al-lean sample at 1000-1200 ℃ and (c) near-stoichiometric sample at 1000-1200 ℃, and (d) square of weight gain per unit surface area of near-stoichiometric sample as a function of oxidation time

    Figure .Weight gain per unit surface area as a function of oxidation time for (a) Zr cladding, Al-lean and near-stoichiometric samples oxidized at 1200 ℃, (b) Al-lean sample at 1000-1200 ℃ and (c) near-stoichiometric sample at 1000-1200 ℃, and (d) square of weight gain per unit surface area of near-stoichiometric sample as a function of oxidation time

    It is worth noting that Zry-4 alloys and Ti2Al1.02C both follow parabolic rate law in high-temperature water vapor oxidation. The parabolic rate constants in Ar-H2O of various candidate coating and cladding materials[18,24-26] for accident tolerant fuels are summarized in Fig. 3. Compared with Zry-4 alloy, the parabolic rate constant of Ti2Al1.02C is four orders of magnitudes lower than 1200 ℃. Bare cladding possesses the highest oxidation rate in water vapor, and the slowest rate is measured for SiC. The oxidation rate of Ti2Al1.02C is between 310SS (Cr2O3 scale) and alumina-forming FeCrAl alloy APMT (Advanced Powder Metallurgy Tube). We can reasonably conclude that near-stoichiometric Ti2AlC is a promising candidate to protect Zry-4 cladding from high temperature water vapor oxidation. Compared to the air oxidation, oxidation in Ar-41% H2O atmosphere of Ti2Al1.02C slightly accelerated. The obtained parabolic rate constant in water vapor at 1200 ℃ is 2.1×10-9 kg2·m-4·s-1, which is slightly higher than that in air (1.1×10-9 kg2·m-4·s-1) as reported by Wang et al.[18]. Basu et al.[27] investigated the long-term oxidation of Ti2AlC in air and 100% water vapor from 1000 to 1300 ℃, and the slightly higher oxidation kinetic for hydrothermal oxidation mainly related to the diffusion of hydroxyl ions with smaller size and lower charge compared to oxide ion through the oxide scale.

    Arrhenius plot of the high temperature oxidation rate constants for various candidate materials in air and water vapor[18, 24-26]

    Figure .Arrhenius plot of the high temperature oxidation rate constants for various candidate materials in air and water vapor[18, 24-26]

    In order to reveal the origin of difference in oxidation behaviors of near-stoichiometric and Al-lean samples, phase composition of the oxide scales formed after isothermal oxidation was analyzed by XRD. As illustrated in Fig. 4, in the temperature range of 1000- 1200 ℃, the scales formed on near-stoichiometric and Al-lean samples only consist of TiO2 (PDF#21-1276) and α-Al2O3 (PDF#46-1212). The relatively high intensity of diffraction from Ti2Al1.02C indicates that the oxide scale formed on near-stoichiometric sample is pretty thin, as shown in Fig. 4(a). The intensity of diffraction peaks associated with Al2O3 increases with oxidation temperature increasing, whereas that for TiO2 remains nearly constant. The scales on near-stoichiometric sample are mainly composed of Al2O3, with a little of TiO2. For oxidized Al-lean sample (Fig. 4(b)), the intensity of Ti2Al0.88C is apparently weaker than that of Ti2Al1.02C, revealing thicker oxide scales. With the increase of oxidation temperature, the diffraction peak of Ti2Al0.88C is further reduced, accompanied with the enhanced diffraction peak of TiO2, indicating thick TiO2-rich oxide scale forms on Al-lean sample after oxidation. The quick growth of TiO2-based scale is non-protective for further oxidation of Al-lean sample, and better oxidation resistance of near-stoichiometric sample can be attributed to the formation of a protective α-Al2O3 scale.

    XRD patterns of (a) near-stoichiometric and (b) Al-lean samples after oxidation at 1000-1200 ℃

    Figure .XRD patterns of (a) near-stoichiometric and (b) Al-lean samples after oxidation at 1000-1200 ℃

    Furthermore, SEM observations were conducted to study the morphology of oxidation products on Ti2AlC bulk ceramics with two different Al contents. Typical surface and cross section morphologies of Al-lean and near-stoichiometric samples after oxidation at 1200 ℃ are shown in Fig. 5. On the surface of Al-lean sample, island colonies of a bright phase are observed, which are the aggregation of large faceted TiO2 grains as evidenced by the insert figure, and the remaining surface is covered by darker Al2O3 grains. As observed in Fig. 5(b), the oxide scale demonstrates a double-layered structure: the outer scale is solely TiO2 whereas the inner scale is a mixture of Al2O3 and TiO2. Al2O3-rich zone is observed at the interface between oxide and Ti2Al0.88C substrate. For near-stoichiometric sample, isolated islands with large elongated TiO2 grains are embedded in small Al2O3 grains (Fig. 5(c)). Dense and continuous Al2O3 scale is clearly detected in Fig. 5(d). The thickness of Al2O3 scales formed on near-stoichiometric sample is only 2.1 μm, which is two orders of magnitude thinner than that of TiO2-based scale (~180 μm thickness) on the Al-lean sample. The formation of oxide scale on bulk Ti2AlC with different Al contents is directly influenced by thermodynamics and kinetic aspects[8-9,16,28]. From a thermodynamic point of view, Al has larger tendency for oxidation than Ti. Kinetically, Al atoms have a high diffusivity due to unique structure of Ti2AlC, in which the rigid Ti-C octahedra is weakly coupled by planar Al atomic layers. The formation of Al2O3 takes place at oxide/substrate interface from inward diffusion of hydroxide ions through the outer oxide layer, and the growth of TiO2 occurs on the outmost surface controlled by outward diffusion of Ti. Basically, more Al2O3 nuclei than TiO2 is expected on titanium aluminum carbide. With a reduction in Al content, larger alumina grains are needed for the formation of a continuous Al2O3 scale, which is ultimately hindered by TiO2 grains, owing to the much higher growth velocity. Herein, TiO2-based scales and continuous Al2O3 scales are formed on near- stoichiometric and Al-lean samples, respectively. The formation of continuous Al2O3 scales inhibits export of reactants, thereby further oxidation of Ti2AlC substrate decreasing.

    Typical surface and cross section morphologies of (a, b) Al-lean and (c, d) near-stoichiometric samples after oxidation at 1200 ℃

    Figure .Typical surface and cross section morphologies of (a, b) Al-lean and (c, d) near-stoichiometric samples after oxidation at 1200 ℃

    For the application of Ti2AlC coatings on Zircaloy cladding, thinner coating (10-30 μm) with improved oxidation resistance is needed to reduce neutron absorption and thermal resistance[28]. For stoichiometric Ti2AlC, the oxide scale growth is dominated by the formation of α-Al2O3 (with a density of 3.98 g/cm3). The oxidation kinetics is parabolic for the growth of a compact Al2O3 scale controlled by diffusion of hydroxide ions through the oxide scale, and the growth rate constant is calculated to be 9.0×10-4 μm2·s-1. The oxide scale thickness derived from the weight data is in good agreement with that detected in cross section morphology. By the formation of thin Al2O3 scales, notably 2.1 μm after oxidation at 1200 ℃ for 1 h, stoichiometric Ti2AlC offers protection against high-temperature oxidation attack during a hypothetical LOCA scenario.

    3 Conclusions

    In this study, the oxidation behavior of near- stoichiometric (Ti2Al1.02C) and Al-lean (Ti2Al0.88C) samples were investigated in Ar-41% H2O atmosphere at 1000-1200 ℃. Near-stoichiometric sample exhibited excellent oxidation resistance, with the parabolic rate constant four orders of magnitude lower than that of Zry-4 at 1200 ℃, owing to the formation of thin and protective Al2O3 scale. While thick unprotective duplex TiO2-based oxide scales were formed on Al-lean sample, because Al content was insufficient to sustain the growth of continuous alumina scales. The oxidation resistance of titanium aluminum carbide is sensitive to Al content, and stoichiometric Ti2AlC coating is a promising candidate to protect Zry-4 cladding in the current light water reactors.

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    Yiming LEI, Jie ZHANG, Guanghai BAI, Yanwei ZHANG, Xiaohui WANG, Jingyang WANG. Influence of Al Content on Oxidation Resistance of Phase-pure Ti2AlC under Simulated Loss-of-coolant Accident Conditions [J]. Journal of Inorganic Materials, 2021, 36(10): 1097
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