Proyecto de Investigación:
DEGRADACION Y PROTECCION DE MATERIALES EN ATMOSFERAS DE OXI-COMBUSTION

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ENE2011-29203-C02-01

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PublicaciónRestringido
Oxidation under pure steam: Cr based protective oxides and coatings
(Elsevier, 2013-09-20) Agüero, Alina; González, Vanessa; Gutiérrez del Olmo, Marcos; Muelas Gamo, Raúl
At temperatures of 900 °C and higher, the formation, transformation and failure of protective oxides in air have been deeply studied. However, there is significantly less available information of these processes when they take place under pure steam and in the lower temperature range pertinent to steam power plants. New designs for these plants are expected to operate at 625–700 °C, at which the candidate ferritic/martensitic steels exhibit very low steam oxidation resistance. In this paper, available knowledge of the behavior of Cr based protective oxides formed under steam at 650 °C will be presented. It is already known that on ferritic/martensitic steels with a Cr content lower than ~ 9 wt.% such as P92, a nonprotective, thick, dual layer composed of Fe3O4 and (Fe, Cr)3O4 forms. However, significantly higher steam oxidation resistance has been recently found when exposing NPM, a 9 wt.% Cr martensitic steel rich in W and Co, to pure steam at 650 °C. In this case a protective, very thin multilayer forms, with alternating Fe3O4 and (Fe, Cr, Mn)3O4 layers. Different oxides formed after 10,000 h of exposure to steam at 650 °C, on Cr containing coatings. In the case of Fe based, Cr rich coatings, both diffusion and overlay, a protective spinel was observed. However, Cr containing coatings based on Ni develop a very stable, protective thin Cr2O3 layer. Results show that along with the Cr content, other factors such as the grain size below the scale appear to determine the formation of thin protective scales. The steam pressure was also found to significantly and negatively affect the stability of protective Cr based oxides. Chromia former steels and coatings may not be the best solution for 650 °C new generation steam power plants.
PublicaciónRestringido
Corrosion Resistance of Novel Coatings on Ferritic Steels for Oxycombustion–Supercritical Steam Boilers: Preliminary Results
(Springer Nature Link, 2015-07-23) Agüero, Alina; Baraibar, Ignacio; González, Vanessa; Muelas Gamo, Raúl; Plana, Daniel; European Commission; Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO)
Increasing the efficiency of coal fired steam power plants is an important contribution towards clean coal power. In fact, new ferritic steels are expected to withstand 325 bar and 650 °C. Moreover, in order to facilitate CO2 capture oxygen can be used instead of air for combustion (oxycombustion) so that no NOX emissions are produced. Boiler components, such as superheater tubes, are exposed to both steam and fireside corrosion and at higher temperatures, ferritic steels corrode at very fast rates under both atmospheres. A solution can be found in the use of protective coatings, a number of which, applied by techniques capable of depositing said coatings both on the inner and outer surfaces of tubes, are being studied within nationally and European funded projects. In particular, two new Ni and Cr modified aluminide coatings deposited on P92 by non-line-of-sight hybrid processes have been produced and the preliminary results of on-going laboratory testing, both under oxycombustion model atmospheres as well as under pure steam at 650 °C are promising, in particular those exhibited by the Cr enriched aluminide coating. Moreover, results obtained in a pilot oxycombustion boiler operated by CIUDEN in Leon, Spain are also shown.

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