Title: Experiences on LeadBismuth PbLi Loops
1Experiences on Lead-Bismuth (Pb-Li) Loops
- C.M. Das, R. Fotedar
- Material Processing Divison
- BARC
2(No Transcript)
3- Corrosion in Lead-Bismuth Eutectic
- Caused by high solubility of Ni, Fe and Cr in
LBE - Factors affecting corrosion
- Alloy composition
- Temperature
- Dissolution
- Solubility
- Diffusion
Solubility in LBE, wppm
- Flow velocity
- Temperature difference
4Static corrosion
- Determined solubility and diffusion of Ni, Fe
and - Cr in LBE
- Corrosion continues till saturation of LBE
Corrosion under Isothermal flow
- Mass transfer by diffusion and
- convection
- Corrosion stops after homogeneity
- is reached throughout the system
5Corrosion under Non-isothermal flow
- Dissolution of elements of steel from the
- high temperature region
- Transportation to lower temperature
- zone and precipitation
- Saturation solubility never reached
- Higher the temperature difference,
- severe is the attack in hot section.
Corrosion mitigation by oxygen control
- Low chemical reactivity of Pb and Bi
- compared to Fe, Cr, Ni
6G. Muller et al., Journal of Nuclear Materials
321 (2003) 256262
- PbO production be avoided.
- Prevent contamination
- Stable hydrodynamics
- Efficient heat transfer
2?G0 (PbO) gt RT ln pO2 gt 0.5??G0 (Fe3O4) pO2 is
oxygen partial pressure in gas equilibrium with
the molten eutectic
Dissolved oxygen concentration ? Solubility of
oxygen
EllinghamRichardson diagram For oxides of Fe,
Ni, Bi and Pb
Oxygen solubility /upper limit in LBE in wppm
(10-4 wt)
7Oxygen concentration range for LBE
Between 200 to 400 ºC 4 x 10-10 to 10-8
wt Between 400 to 600 ºC 2 x 10-7 and 10-5
wt
Oxygen control
CO ½ O2 CO2 H2 ½ O2 H2O
pO2 (pH2O/pH2)2.exp(2?GoH2O/ RT)
Processes in LBE loop
8Oxygen Measurement
Schematic of the electrochemical cell In solid
electrolyte oxygen sensor
Pb 1/3 Bi2O3(Bi) PbO(Pb) 2/3 Bi
Oxygen sensor
9OBJECTIVES
- To gain experience in handling of hot liquid
metal - To gain experience of filling the loop with
molten metal under gas pressure, also to transfer
the same in dump tank in case of emergency - To have an overall feel of the operation of the
system, which includes instruments, safety
aspects and most important reliability of the
system - To study the long-term effects of molten
Lead-Bismuth eutectic alloy on materials of
construction - Diagnostic studies for thermal hydraulic loop.
10DESIGN PHILOSOPHY
- Velocity is induced by flow.
- Flow is induced by buoyancy.
- Buoyancy force is induced by temperature
difference. - Large the temperature difference, mass transfer
of material constituents takes place. - Safe operating temperature (from corrosion view)
was used for calculating buoyancy head.
11DESIGN OF THE LOOP
- The pressure head generated by the buoyancy is
given by - ?Pbuoy ß .?TH. g ?L
- where ß thermal expansion coefficient K -1
- ?TH temp. difference.
- g acceleration due to gravity.
- ?L Distance between the thermal
centers.
12- The pressure head obtained due to buoyancy has to
provide sufficient pressure head to overcome - Pressure drop across the H.E
- Pressure drop across specimens.
- Pressure drop due to friction.
- Pressure drop due to circulation in the pipe.
- The height h required
- H
13- To ensure the calculated buoyancy head is
adequate for driving the loop. Either height of
the loop or diameter of the pipe needs to be
increased. - Increasing the dia. increases the LBE inventory
and other operational difficulties. - Manipulation with height gave the required
buoyancy head.
14THERMAL CONVECTION LOOP
15Safety Analysis
A safety analysis for all normally foreseeable
occurrences was carried out the details are as
follows.
- LEAK BEFORE BREAK ANALYSIS. (LBB)
- In austenitic S.S systems, rupture of a
pipe/ - pressure vessel is not expected because
these - are low-pressure systems contained in highly
- ductile materials.
- Leak before break is used in analyzing a
failure. - Hence at no time a sudden rupture of pipe/
- vessel is expected.
16BENDING ANALYSIS for LBB
17THERMAL CYCLING FOR LBB Analysis
182. Fire Protection
- In case of double rupture the LBE shall come in
contact with following materials. - Ceramic Fiber
- Grade HTZ
- Melting Temp. 1760 ºC
- Max. Service temp. 1260 ºC
- Aluminum Sheet.
- Melting temp.
600 ºC - Active fire fighting by means of spraying
suitable - dry chemical powder.
- Spraying shower of pressurized air
19- Only fires of electrical cables are
- considered under this category, as
- there is no other combustible
- materials present in and around loop
- area.
- Adequate quantity of CO2 extinguisher
- have been provided for the purpose
20LOOP WITH SAFETY FEATURES
21SCADA BASED SAFETY FEATURES
- HEATER FAILURE.
- 2. THERMOCOUPLE FAILURE
- 3. LBE LEAKAGE
22HEATER FAILURE
23LEAK DETECTION
24OPERTING SEQUENCE
- 1. Vacuum tightness at R.T
- 2. Positive pressure tightness at R.T
- 3. Vacuum tightness at elevated temp.
- 4. Preheating of the loop without LBE
- 5. Melt LBE in melting Tank.
- 6. Clean the LBE melt.
- 7. Transfer LBE into the Dump tank.
- 8. Increase the loop temp.
- 9. Transfer the melt into the loop by gas pr.
- 10. Increase the loop leg temp.
- 11. H.E start up and adjust the temp.Diff.
- 12. Loop is operational.
25- Material SS316L
- Dimension 100 cm x 100 cm
- Diameter (ID) 12.5 mm
- Estimated Flow rate 16 cm/s
- Temperature Hot 350 / 450?C
- Cold 250 / 350?C
- Oxygen Ar 5 H2 / 7.4 ?C
26316L and 9Cr-1Mo at 350 and 450ºC for 2500 h
Weight change after exposure
Tensile test in air at 25ºC
- SS 316L resists corrosion in LBE upto 350?C
- 9Cr-1Mo steel is resistant to corrosion upto
450?C - Ductility of both steels increased when exposed
to - LBE. Higher at 450 ?C than at 350 ?C
- UTS was lowered to a large extent at 450 ?C
27Brittle fracture Laminar failure
Ductile fracture
Brittle fracture
Fractographs of SS316L(a) as-received (b) exposed
to LBE at 450?C, and 9Cr-1Mo (c) as-received
(d) exposed to LBE at 450?C
28Cross-section of SS316L exposed to LBE (a) at
350?C (b) at 450?C, and 9Cr-1Mo exposed to LBE
(c) at 350?C (d) at 450?C
No penetration of LBE into 316L or 9Cr-1Mo after
exposure
29304L at 250 and 350ºC for 3600 h
- Weight change after exposure
- At 250 ºC 3-6 mg.cm-2
- At 350 ºC 0.1-0.8 mg.cm-2
- Composition of surface film
- At 250 ºC PbO/ Bi2O3
- At 350 ºC Fe3O4/Cr2O3
- No corrosion of SS304L in LBE at 250 and 350ºC
after 3600 h - Thin oxide layer of Fe3/Cr3 protected
corrosion at 350 ºC
30- Tensile test in air at 25ºC
Stress-strain curve of 304L in air at 25ºC
- Lowering of ductility on exposure to LBE
- Ductility increased with temperature of LBE
- Increase in UTS after exposure
31Fractography of SS304L, (A) annealed, exposed to
LBE (B) 250ºC (C) 350ºC
- All specimens exhibited ductile fracture.
- Decohesion at second phase particles/inclusion
s occurred - to a large extent in case of exposed 304L
32Microstructure of SS304L after oxalic acid etch
(A) annealed, (B) 250ºC and (C) 350ºC
33- EDAX analysis of cross-section
350 ºC
250 ºC
34- SS304L did not undergo any corrosion in LBE
- at 250 and 350ºC after 3600 h.
- No penetration of LBE was seen at either
- temperature
35Thank you