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Meeting MS&T21: Materials Science & Technology
Symposium Computation Assisted Materials Development for Improved Corrosion Resistance
Presentation Title Modeling of High-temperature Corrosion of Zirconium Alloys Using the eXtended Finite Element Method (X-FEM)
Author(s) Louis Bailly-Salins, Léo Borrel, Wen Jiang, Benjamin W. Spencer, Koroush Shirvan, Adrien Couet
On-Site Speaker (Planned) Adrien Couet
Abstract Scope A physically based zirconium alloy corrosion model called the Coupled-Current Charge Compensation (C4) model has been updated to include high-temperature corrosion in order to provide additional critical information (e.g., oxygen concentration profile) under loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA) conditions. The C4 model was implemented in the MOOSE finite-element framework developed at Idaho National Laboratory, enabling it to be coupled with mechanics in the BISON nuclear fuel performance code. The eXtended Finite Element Method (X-FEM) was applied in MOOSE to precisely track the different interfaces. The C4 model implemented with X-FEM in MOOSE now has the capability to accurately predict oxide, oxygen-stabilized α, and prior β phase layer growth kinetics under isothermal exposure at high temperature (1000–1500°C). It can predict the oxygen concentration profile evolution through the whole cladding, enabling evaluation of the remaining ductile thickness—a crucial variable for modeling the mechanical behavior of the fuel cladding under LOCA.

OTHER PAPERS PLANNED FOR THIS SYMPOSIUM

Back to the Basics: Revisiting Copper to Build Thermodynamic Corrosion Models
Computational Modeling of Corrosion and Mechanical Failure in Magnesium-Aluminum Vehicle Joints
Development of a Damage Function for Galvanic Corrosion Degradation of Coated Al Alloy Systems
Factors That Influence Materials Corrosion and How Modeling May Predict These Effects
First Steps Towards a Coupled Thermodynamic-kinetic Model to Predict Sulfate Deposit Induced Hot Corrosion of Aluminized Ni-based Superalloys
Hydrothermal Corrosion of Silicon Carbide
Modeling of High-temperature Corrosion of Zirconium Alloys Using the eXtended Finite Element Method (X-FEM)
Modelling Alkoxide Corrosion Initiation of Pure-aluminum in Ethanol with Integrated Simulation-based Experimental Methods
Modelling Microstructural Evolution of Aluminide Coatings on Ni-based Superalloys
Morphological Stability of Electrostrictive Thin Films
P2-17: Development of Rhenium Free Heat-resistant Nickel Alloy for the Cast Blades Production by the Method of Directional Crystallization
Predictive Modeling of Microstructure Induced Variations in the Sensitization Response of 5XXX Aluminum Alloys
Solubility Based Prediction of Corrosion in Molten Chloride Salts
Understanding and Reducing Bias in Machine Learning to Enhance Its Predictive and Extrapolative Capabilities: Application to the Oxidation Kinetics and Spallation Behavior of High-temperature NiCr-based Alloys

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