Kevin Gautier, Daniel Monceau, Enrica Epifano, Damien Connétable, Thomas Gheno
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The role of nitrogen in the oxidation of Ti-2W, Ti-10Al-2W (at.%) and Ti6242S was investigated using experiments in air and in Ar-20%O2, and two-stage experiments where the reaction gas was switched from one mixture to the other. When switching from Ar-20%O2 to air, the oxidation rates first increased during a short period, then decreased. This surge of mass gain following the introduction of air was attributed to N pickup, forming a nitride layer and a N-enriched zone in the alloy, below the oxide layer. The subsequent decrease of oxidation rate was attributed to the formation of nitride and/or N-rich zone, which both act as diffusion barriers for oxygen. Switching from air to Ar-20%O2 caused an increase in the oxidation rate of the W-containing alloys, which was attributed to the consumption of this barrier. The gas change had no significant effect on the oxidation rate of Ti6242S, which formed a much thinner nitride layer in air. The faster the nitride layer grows, the faster it is consumed when removing N from the reaction gas, probably because of a higher diffusion rate of N in W-doped TiO2 compared to TiO2 formed on Ti6242S.
通过在空气和 Ar-20%O2 中的实验,以及将反应气体从一种混合物切换到另一种混合物的两阶段实验,研究了氮在 Ti-2W、Ti-10Al-2W (at.%) 和 Ti6242S 氧化过程中的作用。当从 Ar-20%O2 切换到空气时,氧化率首先在短时间内上升,然后下降。引入空气后质量增加的激增归因于 N 的拾取,在合金中氧化层以下形成了氮化物层和富含 N 的区域。随后氧化率的下降则归因于氮化物和/或 N 富集区的形成,它们都是氧气的扩散屏障。从空气切换到 Ar-20%O2 会导致含 W 合金的氧化速率增加,这归因于这种屏障的消耗。气体的变化对 Ti6242S 的氧化速率没有明显影响,Ti6242S 在空气中形成的氮化层要薄得多。氮化层的生长速度越快,从反应气体中去除 N 时氮化层的消耗速度也越快,这可能是因为与 Ti6242S 上形成的 TiO2 相比,掺 W 的 TiO2 中 N 的扩散速度更高。
期刊介绍:
Oxidation of Metals is the premier source for the rapid dissemination of current research on all aspects of the science of gas-solid reactions at temperatures greater than about 400˚C, with primary focus on the high-temperature corrosion of bulk and coated systems. This authoritative bi-monthly publishes original scientific papers on kinetics, mechanisms, studies of scales from structural and morphological viewpoints, transport properties in scales, phase-boundary reactions, and much more. Articles may discuss both theoretical and experimental work related to gas-solid reactions at the surface or near-surface of a material exposed to elevated temperatures, including reactions with oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, carbon and halogens. In addition, Oxidation of Metals publishes the results of frontier research concerned with deposit-induced attack. Review papers and short technical notes are encouraged.