Study of the Oxidation Behavior of Fine-Grained Graphite ET-10 by Combining X-ray μCT with Mercury Porosimetry
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Test Specimen
2.2. Oxidation Facility and Experiment Procedure
2.3. Oxidation Rate and Porosity
2.4. X-ray μCT
2.5. Processing and Analyzing Images
- The SiC part and the graphite part of the specimens before oxidation are cylinders, and the differences in their diameters are the same;
- The shape of the SiC part in the specimen is not changed after being oxidized. Its mass loss due to oxidation is determined by the oxidation time;
- The whole specimen can be divided axially into two halves, and they are symmetrical.
2.6. Pore Structure Analysis
2.7. Simulation of Micro-Hydromechanics
3. Results
3.1. Oxidation Rate
3.2. Porosities of Pure Specimens Assessed using a Mercury Porosimeter
3.3. 3D Pictures of SiC-Coated Graphite Specimen Captured by X-ray μCT
3.4. Pore Structure Analysis by Combining X-ray μCT with Mercury Porosimetry
3.4.1. Porosity of Unoxidized Graphite Component Far Away from the SiC Coating
3.4.2. Porosity of Half of the Partially SiC-Coated Graphite Specimen
3.4.3. Geometry of Pores
3.5. Simulation Results of Micro-Hydromechanics
3.5.1. Gas Velocity Distributions of Pure Graphite Specimens
3.5.2. Gas Velocity Distributions for Partially SiC-Coated Graphite Specimens
4. Discussion
4.1. Oxygen Supply, Grain Size and Geometry of Specimen
4.2. Specialities of Small Partially SiC-Coated Graphite Specimen
- The SiC coating is a high-hardness material and the graphite is a low-hardness material. The uneven side surface and the carbon dust present in it due to the wire cutting (Figure 8) may accelerate the oxidation of the outermost region;
- The angle between the gas flow and the specimen at the bottom section of the U-tube introduces the high-speed tangential component of gas flow close to the specimen (the first column of Figure 16). This also accelerates the oxidation of the outermost region of the specimen.
4.3. Conditions for Oxidation Experiment
- As shown in Figure 16, the gas flow in the specimen is uniform when its two round faces are covered by SiC;
- The short distance from the surface to the inside of the small specimen means the oxygen in the gas can penetrate the specimen’s interior before being exhausted via oxidation;
- The oxidation rate is quick. It only took several minutes to reach around 10% mass loss at 700 °C. We can repeat the oxidation experiments easily;
- The millimeter specimen facilitates the measurements employed for observing the microstructure of the specimen, e.g., X-ray μCT, SEM;
- The costs for constructing and operating the small test facility are lower than those for a large test facility.
4.4. What Was Oxidized and Its Relevance to the Three-Regime Theory
4.5. Future Studies
- To process the high-hardness SiC, wire cutting was adopted. However, the side surface of the obtained SiC-coated specimen was very uneven, and a lot of carbon dust penetrated the uneven side’s surface;
- The arc flow path in the bottom section of the U-tube resulted in the high-speed tangential component of the gas flow close to the specimen.
- A detachable structure using SiC or other non-corrosive materials will be adopted to cover the two round faces of the small pure cylinder graphite. Pure cylinder graphite can be produced easily with low contents of carbon dust in the even side surface;
- The U-tube will have a long straight bottom section and the specimen will be placed in the middle of the center of the bottom section.
- Graphite: ET-10, IG-110, etc.;
- Airflow at inlet: 0.005–0.06 L/min;
- Geometry of the graphite specimen: D = 0.5–1.5 mm, H = 1–2 mm;
- Inner diameter of the quartz tube: 3–5 mm;
- Oxidation temperature range: 500–800 °C;
- Observations of the microstructure and impurities: X-ray μCT, mercury porosimetry, SEM, EDX (energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy) [6], etc.
- The related discussion of the oxidation mechanism for synthesizing graphite oxide [46] can provide a clue for establishing the model for chemically kinetics-controlled oxidation. Some related studies had been successfully carried out [13]. In addition, the related oxidation processes and oxidizing agents may help to selectively oxidize the binder or the filler for contrast experiments.
- The oxidation mechanism of the filler grain may be relevant to the related kinetics study of the oxidation of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) [47,48]. The properties of HOPG are similar to those of the graphite grain. The beginning stage of the oxidation with a low gas flow rate (0.3 L/min) at 600 °C [49] (p. 86) is similar to that of the HOPG [47] (p. 9946).
- The oxidation of nuclear graphite will be varied with the evolution of the oxidized compositions and the oxygen supply due to the interactions among the intrinsic characteristics and exterior conditions, e.g., the ratios of the different compositions, geometry, microstructure, gas flow rate, temperature, mass loss, etc. The two above-mentioned mechanisms should be integrated to establish a comprehensive model for the oxidation of nuclear graphite.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Impurity | B | Si | Ca | Fe | Al | K | V | Mg |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Value (ppm) | <0.1 | <1.0 | – | <1.2 | <0.1 | – | – | <0.1 |
No | Geometry (mm) | Temperature (°C) | Time (min) | Flow Rate (L/min) | Oxygen Concentration (%) | Inner Diameter of Tube (mm) | Thickness of SiC (μm) | Density (mg/mm3) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Graphite | SiC | ||||||||
1 | D = H = 25.4 | 675–900 | 480–2520 | 10 | 21% (air) | 65 | \ | 1.725 | \ |
2 | D ≈ 1, H = 1.95 | 700 | 4–24 | 0.04 | 10% (He and O2) | 4 | 90 | 1.725 | 2.9 |
Item Name | CCD Camera | Number of Images | Distance of Two Images (nm) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Size of Pixel (nm2) | Pixel | Magnification | |||
Value | 740 × 740 | 2048 × 2048 | 10 | 2048 | 600 |
Item Name | Absolute Permeability Experiment Simulation | Absolute Permeability Tensor Calculation | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pressure at Outlet (Pa) | Flow Rate at Inlet (μm3/s) | Fluid Viscosity (Pa·s) | Convergence Criterion | Iterations | |
Value | 105 | 1.9 × 1010 | 4.18 × 10−5 | 1 × 10−4 | 5000 |
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Zhao, Y.; Dong, Y.; Zhou, Y.; Li, Z.; Yan, R.; Zhang, Z. Study of the Oxidation Behavior of Fine-Grained Graphite ET-10 by Combining X-ray μCT with Mercury Porosimetry. Nanomaterials 2022, 12, 4354. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12244354
Zhao Y, Dong Y, Zhou Y, Li Z, Yan R, Zhang Z. Study of the Oxidation Behavior of Fine-Grained Graphite ET-10 by Combining X-ray μCT with Mercury Porosimetry. Nanomaterials. 2022; 12(24):4354. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12244354
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhao, Yumeng, Yujie Dong, Yangping Zhou, Zhengcao Li, Rui Yan, and Zuoyi Zhang. 2022. "Study of the Oxidation Behavior of Fine-Grained Graphite ET-10 by Combining X-ray μCT with Mercury Porosimetry" Nanomaterials 12, no. 24: 4354. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12244354
APA StyleZhao, Y., Dong, Y., Zhou, Y., Li, Z., Yan, R., & Zhang, Z. (2022). Study of the Oxidation Behavior of Fine-Grained Graphite ET-10 by Combining X-ray μCT with Mercury Porosimetry. Nanomaterials, 12(24), 4354. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12244354