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Electrochemical Testing of Gas Tungsten ARC Welded and Reduced Pressure Electron Beam Welded Alloy 22
Author(s) -
S Daniel Day,
Frank M.G. Wong,
Steven R. Gordon,
Lana L Wong,
Raúl B. Rebak
Publication year - 2006
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/893361
Subject(s) - welding , gas tungsten arc welding , materials science , metallurgy , corrosion , base metal , tungsten , alloy , arc welding , gas metal arc welding , shielding gas , shielded metal arc welding , electron beam welding , electrochemistry , cathode ray , electrode , chemistry , electron , physics , quantum mechanics
Alloy 22 (N06022) is the material selected for the fabrication of the outer shell of the nuclear waste containers for the Yucca Mountain high-level nuclear waste repository site. A key technical issue in the waste package program has been the integrity of the container weld joints. The currently selected welding process for fabricating and sealing the containers is the traditional gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW) or TIC method. An appealing faster alternative technique is reduced pressure electron beam (RPEB) welding. It was of interest to compare the corrosion properties of specimens prepared using both types of welding techniques. Standard electrochemical tests were carried on GTAW and RPEB welds as well as on base metal (non-welded) to determine their relative corrosion behavior in simulated concentrated water (SCW) at 90 C (alkaline), 1 M HCI at 60 C (acidic) and 1 M NaCl at 90 C (neutral) solutions. Results show that for all practical purposes, the three tested materials had the same electrochemical behavior in the three tested electrolytes

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