Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5356080 | Applied Surface Science | 2016 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The potential of reducing the oxidation of the supporting graphite components during normal and/or accident conditions in the Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR) design has been studied. In this work efforts have been made to slow the oxidation process of the graphite with a thin SiC coating (â¼Â 10 μm). Upon heating at â¥Â 1173 K in air, the spallations and cracks were formed in the dense columnar structured SiC coating layer grown on the graphite with a functionally gradient electron beam physical vapor deposition (EB-PVD. In accordance with the formations of these defects, the sample was vigorously oxidized, leaving only the SiC coating layer. Then, efforts were made to heal the surface defects using additional EB-PVD with ion beam bombardment and chemical vapor deposition (CVD). The EB-PVD did not effectively heal the cracks. But, the CVD was more appropriate for crack healing, likely due to its excellent crack line filling capability with a high density and high aspect ratio. It took â¼Â 34 min for the 20% weight loss of the CVD crack healed sample in the oxidation test with annealing at 1173 K, while it took â¼Â 8 min for the EB-PVD coated sample, which means it took â¼4 times longer at 1173 K for the same weight reduction in this experimental set-up.
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Authors
Jae-Won Park, Eung-Seon Kim, Jae-Un Kim, Yootaek Kim, William E. Windes,