Effect of pressure on the corrosion and carburization behavior of chromia-forming heat-resistant alloys in high-temperature carbon dioxide environments
Chromia-forming heat-resistant alloys were corroded in atmospheric CO2 (0.1 MPa) and supercritical-CO2 (S-CO2, 10 and 20 MPa) at 550-650 degrees C for 1000 h. The weight gain and the extent of an amorphous C layer at the oxide/matrix interface increased with increasing CO2 pressure from 0.1 MPa to 20 MPa, but the increase was mostly less than a factor of 2. Despite the huge difference in the test pressure, the depth of the carburized region with Cr-rich carbides was rarely affected for Alloy 800HT, resulting in similar tensile properties after corrosion in CO2 and S-CO2. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved