• DocumentCode
    1948462
  • Title

    General and crevice corrosion study of the materials for ITER Vacuum Vessel In-Wall Shield

  • Author

    Joshi, K.S. ; Pathak, H.A. ; Dayal, R.K. ; Bafna, V.K. ; Kimihir, Loki ; Barabash, V.

  • Author_Institution
    GIDC, ITER-India, Gandhinagar, India
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    26-30 June 2011
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    6
  • Abstract
    Vacuum Vessel In-Wall Shield (IWS) will be inserted between the inner and outer shells of the ITER vacuum vessel and comprise of number of plates stacked together with spacers and bolts. The behavior of IWS in the vacuum vessel especially concerning the susceptibility to crevice of shielding block assemblies could cause rapid and extensive corrosion attacks. Even galvanic corrosion may be due to different metals in same electrolyte. The flow rate is locally rather low in the VV-IWS block assemblies and low flow rates generally promote local attacks on the stainless steel. In addition local accumulation of the aggressive compounds like chloride and other anions might be higher for ITER condition due to the different operational modes. IWS blocks are not accessible until life of the machine after closing of vacuum vessel. Hence, it is necessary to study the susceptibility of IWS materials to general corrosion and crevice corrosion under operations of ITER vacuum vessel. Corrosion properties of IWS materials were studied by using (i) Immersion technique and (ii) Electro-chemical Polarization techniques at normal operation condition (OC1), baking condition (OC2) and at draining and drying operations (OC3) of ITER vacuum vessel.
  • Keywords
    Tokamak devices; corrosion; electrochemical analysis; fusion reactor materials; fusion reactor operation; plasma toroidal confinement; shielding; stainless steel; ITER vacuum vessel in-wall shield; IWS materials; VV-IWS block assemblies; aggressive compounds; baking condition; crevice corrosion study; draining operation; drying operation; electrochemical polarization technique; electrolyte; extensive corrosion; galvanic corrosion; immersion technique; normal operation condition; operational modes; shielding block assemblies; stainless steel; Chemistry; Electric potential; Gain measurement; Materials; Passivation; Vacuum technology; Weight measurement; Eb-Breakdown critical pitting potential; Electro-chemical Polarization; Ep-Protection potential; IWS; Icc-Critical current density; Immersion method; OC1; OC2; SEM;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Fusion Engineering (SOFE), 2011 IEEE/NPSS 24th Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Chicago, IL
  • ISSN
    1078-8891
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4577-0669-1
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1078-8891
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SOFE.2011.6052259
  • Filename
    6052259