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Article

Utilizing Fly Ash from Coal-Fired Power Plants to Join ZrO2 and Crofer by Reactive Air Brazing

by
Shu-Wei Chang
1,2,
Ren-Kae Shiue
1,* and
Liang-Wei Huang
3
1
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, National Taiwan University, Taipei 106, Taiwan
2
Chemistry and Environment Research Laboratory, Taiwan Power Research Institute, Taiwan Power Company, New Taipei City 238, Taiwan
3
Department of Material Research, National Atomic Research Institute, Taoyuan 325, Taiwan
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Materials 2025, 18(9), 1956; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18091956
Submission received: 2 April 2025 / Revised: 20 April 2025 / Accepted: 23 April 2025 / Published: 25 April 2025

Abstract

This study attempts to use fly ash as the brazing filler additive to increase the sustainable use of coal-fired power plant by-product materials. The experimental results show that adding 5 wt% fly ash into the Ag paste filler contributes to the interfacial reactions in heterogeneous reactive air brazing (RAB) of the ZrO2 and Crofer alloy. The Ag-rich phase dominates the brazed zone. The interfacial reaction layers contain oxidation of the Cu-Ti coating layer, Crofer alloy, and the Si/Al-rich oxides from the fly ash particles. The 5% fly ash RAB joint maintained airtightness for 280 h under 2 psig helium at room temperature. When the test temperature was raised to 600 °C for 24 h, the pressure of the joint assembly still did not drop. When the fly ash addition was increased to 10 wt%, the joint assembly was no longer leak-free at room temperature. Many visible voids and cracks exist in the brazed zone and at the ZrO2/braze and braze/Crofer interfaces. A high volume fraction of the fly ash particles results in many brittle Si/Al-rich oxides in the joint after RAB, and the fracture of these oxides significantly deteriorates the airtightness of the joint. This study shows the feasibility and potential of introducing 5 wt% fly ash particles to the Ag-rich paste filler during the RAB of ZrO2 and Crofer for airtight applications.
Keywords: fly ash; reactive air brazing; airtightness; microstructure; interface fly ash; reactive air brazing; airtightness; microstructure; interface

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Chang, S.-W.; Shiue, R.-K.; Huang, L.-W. Utilizing Fly Ash from Coal-Fired Power Plants to Join ZrO2 and Crofer by Reactive Air Brazing. Materials 2025, 18, 1956. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18091956

AMA Style

Chang S-W, Shiue R-K, Huang L-W. Utilizing Fly Ash from Coal-Fired Power Plants to Join ZrO2 and Crofer by Reactive Air Brazing. Materials. 2025; 18(9):1956. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18091956

Chicago/Turabian Style

Chang, Shu-Wei, Ren-Kae Shiue, and Liang-Wei Huang. 2025. "Utilizing Fly Ash from Coal-Fired Power Plants to Join ZrO2 and Crofer by Reactive Air Brazing" Materials 18, no. 9: 1956. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18091956

APA Style

Chang, S.-W., Shiue, R.-K., & Huang, L.-W. (2025). Utilizing Fly Ash from Coal-Fired Power Plants to Join ZrO2 and Crofer by Reactive Air Brazing. Materials, 18(9), 1956. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18091956

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