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Compatibility of Steels in Supercritical CO2 at 450°-650°C...

by Bruce A Pint, Rishi R Pillai, James R Keiser
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Proceedings of Corrosion 2021
Publication Date
Page Number
16724
Publisher Location
Houston, Texas, United States of America
Conference Name
CORROSION 2021
Conference Location
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
NACE International
Conference Date
-

Supercritical CO2 (sCO2) power cycles, particularly direct-fired cycles, have the possibility of revolutionizing clean fossil energy. However, in the lower temperature sections of the cycle, lower cost steels are needed in order to lower the cost of the sCO2 technology. Representative 9 and 12%Cr steels and conventional and advanced austenitic steels are being evaluated at 450-650°C using mass change, bulk carbon (C) content and room temperature tensile properties to determine the maximum use temperatures for both direct- and indirect-fired sCO2 cycles. After 1000 h exposures in research grade (RG) sCO2 at 300 bar and RG sCO2 with 1% O2 and 0.1% H2O additions, the results suggest that increasing the Cr content from 9 to 12% yielded no signficant benefit under these conditions but the higher Cr and Ni contents in S31025 provided better compatibility in RG sCO2 at 650°C but limited benefit at 550°C with impurities. For S31609, the formation of Fe-rich oxide after exposure to RG sCO2 at 650°C resulted in both an increase in the bulk C content and a large drop in room temperature ductility. The evidence suggests thin, protective oxides prevented C ingress in these conditions.