Carbon steel is a candidate material for radioactive waste containers in several countries. This paper summarizes and reviews the research that has been carried out within the United Kingdom and Swedish national programs to assess the corrosion behavior of carbon steel in the various environments expected during waste disposal, for cementitious and bentonitic backfill materials. It reviews the relevant environmental conditions and the corrosion processes expected during each stage of waste disposal, then considers the general corrosion and localized corrosion behavior of carbon steel in both atmospheric and aqueous conditions. Particular emphasis is placed on the long-term anaerobic corrosion processes that will occur under reducing conditions in a waste repository. The review also discusses expansive corrosion, galvanic corrosion, and radiolytic corrosion of carbon steel during waste disposal.
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1 March 2009
Research Article|
March 01 2009
Corrosion Behavior of Carbon Steel Radioactive Waste Packages: A Summary Review of Swedish and U.K. Research
N.R. Smart
N.R. Smart
*Serco Technical and Assurance Services, Culham Science Centre, Abingdon, Oxfordshire, OX14 3ED,
United Kingdom
.
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Online ISSN: 1938-159X
Print ISSN: 0010-9312
NACE International
2009
CORROSION (2009) 65 (3): 195–212.
Citation
N.R. Smart; Corrosion Behavior of Carbon Steel Radioactive Waste Packages: A Summary Review of Swedish and U.K. Research. CORROSION 1 March 2009; 65 (3): 195–212. https://doi.org/10.5006/1.3319128
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