NE Seminar: “Rust Never Sleeps: Hot liquids, Ionizing Radiation, and the Materials That Can Stand Up to Them”

Date/Time

03/24/2022
1:55 pm-2:55 pm
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Stephen Raiman, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor of Nuclear Engineering
Texas A&M University

Dr. Stephen Raiman is an Assistant Professor of Nuclear Engineering at Texas A&M University, with a courtesy appointment in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. He is interested in understanding corrosion and degradation of materials in extreme environments. Prior to joining Texas A&M University, he spent 4 years as a staff researcher in the Materials Science and Technology Division of Oak Ridge National Laboratory. He graduated from The University of Michigan in 2016 with a Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences with a concentration in materials. He also holds a B.S. in Physics from the University at Buffalo.

Abstract

As reactor designers challenge the limits of material performance, corrosion scientists work on controlling material and environmental properties to meet these challenges and ensure long economic service times.

This 2-part talk will discuss recent research showing how corrosion science is used to address challenges with current light water reactors and enable next-generation molten salt reactors.

Nuclear power is our world’s most abundant source of clean, scalable baseload energy, but high-profile accidents have eroded public confidence. It may be surprising to learn the Fukushima accident in 2011 was a corrosion problem, involving the runaway oxidation of a zirconium alloy used as a core structural material. Since the accident, the nuclear industry together with the Department of Energy has sought to replace zirconium-based fuel cladding with a material that will better withstand a beyond-design-basis accident. Part 1 of this talk will present results and analysis of experiments investigating corrosion of materials for use as advanced accident-tolerant fuel cladding.

The second part of the talk will describe a program investigating materials for use with molten salts as a coolant and storage medium in advanced nuclear reactors, concentrating solar power systems and thermal batteries. Among the challenges with using molten salts is the aggressive environment imposed upon salt-facing structural components. A combined experimental and computational strategy in which traditional experimentation was coupled with x-ray spectroscopy and thermodynamic modeling was used to identify relevant reactions and to develop a thermodynamic description of the alloy-salt system. Flowing experiments were used to more accurately recreate the in-service environment and qualify materials for service in molten salt systems. This presentation will describe an approach to fundamentally understanding the degradation of alloys in molten salts, and using the knowledge to create practical engineering solutions.

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UF Materials Science & Engineering Dept.