Publication | Closed Access
Volatility of Common Protective Oxides in High-Temperature Water Vapor: Current Understanding and Unanswered Questions
240
Citations
6
References
2004
Year
Materials ScienceChemical EngineeringEnvironmental ChemistryEngineeringCorrosionOxidation ResistanceCommon Protective OxidesWater VaporVolatile ElementChemistryCurrent UnderstandingOxide ScaleHigh TemperatureChemical KineticsHigh-temperature Water VaporHeterogeneous Combustion
Many structural materials rely on the formation of chromia, silica or alumina as a protective layer when exposed in high temperature oxidizing environments. The presence of these oxide layers provides a protective diffusion barrier which slows down further oxidation. In atmospheres containing water vapor, however, reactions to form volatile hydroxide species occur which remove the surface oxide, thus, lowering the protective capability of the oxide scale. This paper summarizes the current understanding of volatility of chromia, silica and alumina in water vapor containing combustion environments. In addition unanswered questions in each system are discussed. Th current paper represents an update on the considerable information learned in the past five years for these systems.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1