Waste-to-energy (WTE) technology via municipal solid waste incineration (MSWI) have developed very rapidly with the advantages of achievement on waste disposal and energy conversion. This technology is developing towards higher capacity and efficiency. Therefore, the operation parameters of WTE boilers must be improved. However, higher steam parameters means higher surface temperature of exchange tube in superheaters and reheaters in WTE boilers, resulting higher risk of engineering failure due to high-temperature corrosion. Additionally, the incineration of MSW releases flue gas with a high content of corrosive species and water vapor, which can cause severe high-temperature corrosion. This experimental investigation details the effect of surface temperature and water vapor concentration on the high-temperature corrosion behavior of 12Cr1MoVG boiler steel under an atmosphere mimicking MSWI. The corrosion test environment consists of high temperature, ash deposit and simulated flue gas of waste incineration according to a real WTE boiler. The experiment was conducted using a two-zone bench-scale tube furnace with a gas temperature of 600℃ and the sample temperatures of 380℃, 430℃, and 480℃. For the investigation of water vapor concentration effect, 18 % vol and 23 % vol were set up in this study. After 240 hours of exposure, the corrosion weight curves illustrated that the corrosion kinetics was highly dependent on the surface temperature of corrosion samples. Furthermore, an increase in water vapor concentration exacerbated the high-temperature corrosion. XRD analysis identified the corrosion products as metal chlorides and metal oxides. Cross-sectional SEM images and EDS analysis revealed that an increase in water vapor accelerated the corrosion rate of the steel samples due to chromium dilution behavior.
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