Abstract

Abstracts. A high-temperature molten salt natural convection loop was designed and manufactured for chloride-based salts. NaCl-MgCl2 salt was prepared and injected into the loop. Corrosion coupons composed of SS304, SS316L, and high-Ni alloys were also prepared as candidate structural materials for molten chloride salt reactors. After a corrosion experiment was conducted for 500 h, the salt was drained from the loop to the drain tank; inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy was used to investigate metal dissolution from the materials into the salt. The corroded materials were analyzed using scanning electron microscopy and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy to calculate the corrosion rate. Materials exposed to NaCl-MgCl2 molten salt showed varying levels of corrosion resistance. The high-Ni alloy demonstrated the highest resistance, followed by SS316L and SS304. Furthermore, corrosion products were observed to migrate along the molten salt through natural convection, eventually depositing onto the surface of the high-Ni alloy in the cold leg of the loop.

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