The researchers found that the corrosion mechanisms differ in dimensions from three to two to one. In 1D, the corrosion partially runs along the grain boundaries of the metal material. Image: Yang Yang/Penn State.
The researchers found that the corrosion mechanisms differ in dimensions from three to two to one. In 1D, the corrosion partially runs along the grain boundaries of the metal material. Image: Yang Yang/Penn State.

It all started with a mystery: how did a molten salt breach its metal container? Understanding the behavior of molten salt, a proposed coolant for next-generation nuclear reactors and fusion power, is a question of critical safety for advanced energy production.

To find an answer to this mystery, a multi-institutional team co-led by researchers at Penn State initially imaged a cross-section of the sealed container, finding no clear pathway for the salt to pass through to the outside. The researchers then used electron tomography, a 3D imaging technique, to reveal the tiniest of connected passages linking the two sides of the solid container, which only led to more questions. They report their findings in a paper in Nature Communications.

“Corrosion, a ubiquitous failure mode of materials, is traditionally measured in three dimensions or two dimensions, but those theories were not sufficient to explain the phenomenon in this case,” said co-corresponding author Yang Yang, assistant professor of engineering science and mechanics and of nuclear engineering at Penn State. He is also affiliated with the National Center for Electron Microscopy at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, as well as the Materials Research Institute at Penn State. “We found that this penetrating corrosion was so localized, it only existed in one dimension – like a wormhole.”

Wormholes on Earth, unlike the hypothetical astrophysical phenomenon, are typically bored by insects like worms and beetles. They dig into the ground, wood or fruits, leaving one hole behind as they excavate an unseen labyrinth. The worm may return to the surface through a new hole. From the surface, it looks like the worm disappears at one point in space and time and reappears at another. Electron tomography was able to reveal the hidden tunnels of the molten salt’s route on a microscopic scale, whose morphology looks very similar to wormholes.

To interrogate how the molten salt ‘digs’ through metal, Yang and the team developed new tools and new analysis approaches. According to Yang, their findings not only reveal a new mechanism of corrosion morphology, but also point to the potential of intentionally designing such structures to produce more advanced materials.

“Corrosion is often accelerated at specific sites due to various material defects and distinct local environments, but the detection, prediction and understanding of localized corrosion is extremely challenging,” said co-corresponding author Andrew Minor, professor of materials science and engineering at the University of California Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

The researchers hypothesized that wormhole formation is linked to the exceptional concentration of vacancies – the empty sites that result from removing atoms – in a material. To prove this, they combined 4D scanning transmission electron microscopy with theoretical calculations to identify the vacancies in metal alloys. Together, this allowed them to map vacancies in the atomic arrangement of the alloys at the nanometer scale. According to Yang, the resulting resolution is 10,000 times higher than conventional detection methods.

“Materials are not perfect,” said co-corresponding author Michael Short, associate professor of nuclear science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). “They have vacancies, and the vacancy concentration increases as the material is heated, is irradiated or, in our case, undergoes corrosion. Typical vacancy concentrations are much less than the one caused by molten salt, which aggregates and serve as the precursor of the wormhole.”

Molten salt, which can be used as a reaction medium for materials synthesis, solvent recycling and more, in addition to its use as a nuclear reactor coolant, selectively removes atoms from the metal alloy during corrosion, forming the 1D wormholes along 2D defects, called grain boundaries. The researchers found that the molten salt filled the voids of various metal alloys in unique ways.

“Only after we know how the salt infiltrates can we intentionally control or use it,” said co-first author Weiyue Zhou, a postdoctoral associate at MIT. “This is crucial for the safety of many advanced engineering systems.”

Now that the researchers better understand how the molten salt traverses specific metals – and how it changes depending on the salt and metal types – they hope to apply that physics to better predict the failure of materials and to design more resistant materials.

“As a next step, we want to understand how this process evolves as a function of time and how we can capture the phenomenon with simulation to help understand the mechanisms,” said co-author Mia Jin, assistant professor of nuclear engineering at Penn State. “Once modeling and experiments can go hand-in-hand, it can be more efficient to learn how to make new materials to suppress this phenomenon when undesired and utilize it otherwise.”

This story is adapted from material from Penn State, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.