Laboratory-scale method for high-temperature gas-to-solid deposition and corrosion studies – P235GH and AISI316 exposed to PbCl2 and KCl

Jonne Niemi*, Roland Balint, Juho Lehmusto

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

A novel experimental setup was developed and tested to investigate high-temperature corrosion under temperature gradients. The setup considers simultaneous deposit formation and corrosion. The setup is composed of an air-cooled probe with an exchangeable vertically aligned steel sample, inserted into a hot tube furnace. The experiments were conducted by exposing P235GH and AISI316 steel samples to PbCl2 and KCl. The salt material was vaporized from a crucible. The salt subsequently nucleated on the cooled sample surface. Material temperatures of 350–500 °C and atmospheric temperatures of 650–750 °C were tested. PbCl2 deposition increased with higher atmospheric temperatures. In addition, the oxide layer thicknesses increased with higher material and atmospheric temperatures. The presence of KCl together with PbCl2 further enhanced corrosion. The formation of FeCl2 induced the formation of eutectic molten phases, enhancing the corrosion. This research contributes to understanding the challenges posed by high-temperature corrosion in waste-fired boilers.
Original languageEnglish
Article number121726
JournalChemical Engineering Science
Volume313
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2025
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Keywords

  • Temperature gradient
  • Ash deposit
  • High-temperature corrosion

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