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V. Zilberstein
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Series: ASM Failure Analysis Case Histories
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 June 2019
DOI: 10.31399/asm.fach.power.c9001559
EISBN: 978-1-62708-229-7
Abstract
One inch diam Type 304 stainless steel piping was designed to carry containment atmosphere samples to an analyzer to monitor hydrogen and oxygen levels during operational and the design basis accident conditions that are postulated to occur in a boiling water reactor. Only one of six lines in the system had thru-wall cracks. Shallow incipient cracks were detected at the lowest elevations of one other line. The balance of the system had no signs of SCC attack. Chlorides and corrosion deposits in varying amounts were found throughout the system. The failure mechanism was transgranular, chloride, stress-corrosion cracking. Replacement decisions were based on the presence of SCC attack or heavy corrosion deposits indicative of extended exposure time to chloride-contaminated water. The existing uncracked pipe, about 75 percent of the piping in the system, was retained despite the presence of low level surface chlorides. Controls were implemented to insure that temperatures are kept below 150 deg F, or, walls of the pipe are moisture-free or the cumulative wetted period will never exceed 30 h.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC 2006, Thermal Spray 2006: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 1125-1132, May 15–18, 2006,
Abstract
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This paper describes flexible inductive sensors, such as the Meandering Winding Magnetometer (MWM) and MWM-Arrays for characterization of conductive nonmagnetic, conductive magnetic and nonconductive magnetic materials; and capacitive sensors, such as the flexible Interdigitated Electrode Dielectrometer (IDED) (MWM and IDED are registered trademarks of JENTEK Sensors, Inc.) for characterization of dielectric materials. These sensors and multivariate inversion algorithms can provide effective nondestructive characterization of thermal spray coatings on complex shape components.