The effect of substrate texture and oxidation temperature on oxide texture development in zirconium alloys

Alistair Garner, Philipp Frankel, J. Partezana, Michael Preuss

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    During corrosion of zirconium alloys a highly textured oxide is formed, the degree of this preferred orientation has previously been shown to be an important factor in determining the corrosion behaviour of these alloys. Two distinct experiments were designed in order to investigate the origin of this oxide texture development on two commercial alloys. Firstly, sheet samples of Zircaloy-4 were oxidised between 500 and 800C in air. The resulting monoclinic oxide texture strength was observed to decrease with increasing oxidation temperature. In a second experiment, orthogonal faces of Low Tin ZIRLO™ were oxidised in 360 °C water, providing different substrate textures but identical microstructures. The substrate texture was observed to have a negligible effect on the corrosion performance whilst the major orientation of both oxide phases was found to be independent of substrate orientation. It is concluded that the main driving force for oxide texture development in single-phase zirconium alloys is the compressive stress caused by the Zr-ZrO2 transformation.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalJournal of Nuclear Materials
    Early online date24 Oct 2016
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb 2017

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