Stormer said:
And some suggest making critical parts out of superalloys. But can you not just coat the stainless steel with a erosion resistant coating in stead of making the whole part out of superalloys? And if so what sort of coating material will be suitable? Will for example titanium nitride coating, or hard chrome plating help against erosion?
See:
Corrosion of a stainless steel and nickel-based alloys in high temperature supercritical carbon dioxide environment, V.Firouzdor, K.Sridharan, G.Cao, M.Anderson, T.R.Allen
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0010938X12006257
Penetration of protective chromia scales by carbon, David J.Young, Thuan Dinh Nguyen, Peter Felfer, Jianqiang Zhang, Julie M.Cairney
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S135964621400013X
Attack of the chromia layer is a problem. Atom probe analysis shows that carbon penetrates the scale via oxide grain boundaries. Attack on the grain boundaries means that grains can lift out, hence the erosion.
Corrosion behaviors of four stainless steels with similar chromium content in supercritical carbon dioxide environment at 650 °C, Hongsheng Chen, Sung Hwan Kim, Chaewon Kim, Junjie Chen, Changheui Jang
This approach may be promising.
Surface modification of austenitic stainless steel for corrosion resistance in high temperature supercritical-carbon dioxide environment, Sung Hwan Kim, Gokul Obulan Subramanian, Chaewon Kim, Changheui Jang, Keun Man Park
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0257897218305899
• Al and NiAl layers were coated on 316LN, followed by inter-diffusion treatment.
• Surface-modified specimens exhibited lower weight gains in S-CO
2 at 650 °C.
• Pre-oxidation at 900 °C formed α-Al
2O
3, which further improved corrosion resistance.
• NiAl coating showed smaller inter-diffusion zone before and after S-CO
2 exposure.
Corrosion and carburization behavior of Al-rich surface layer on Ni-base alloy in supercritical-carbon dioxide environment, Ho Jung Lee, Sung Hwan Kim, Hyunmyung Kim, Changheui Jang
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0169433215028597
• Al-rich layer was developed on Alloy 600 by Al deposition and EB remelting.
• When exposed to S-CO
2 at 600 °C, mostly Cr
2O
3 with transition Al
2O
3 was formed.
• Carburized region of amorphous C layer was observed at the oxide/matrix interface.
• α-Al
2O
3 was formed after pre-oxidation which resulted in superior resistance.
See also this open source study, which unfortunately is thin on sCO
2.
Long-Term Performance of High Temperature Alloys in Oxidizing Environments and Supercritical CO
2
https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1607012
One also has to consider the thermodynamic stability of the metallic (mechanical) substrate, and differential thermal expansion of the coating and metallic substrate.
Edit/update:
Corrosion of Structural Materials for Advanced Supercritical Carbon-Dioxide Brayton Cycle
Looking at 316, 310, 709 and others
https://neup.inl.gov/SiteAssets/Final Reports/FY 2013/13-4900 NEUP Final Report.pdf