Current designs for the geological disposal of high-level radioactive wastes in Japan use carbon steel overpack containers surrounded by a mixed bentonite/sand buffer material, which will be located in a purpose built repository deep in the underground. There are suitable sites for a repository in Japan, however coastal areas are preferred from a logistics point of view. It is therefore important to perform the long-term performance of the carbon steel overpack and mixed bentonite/sand buffer material in the saline groundwaters of coastal areas. In the current study, the passivation behavior and initial corrosion rates of carbon steel with and without mixed bentonite/sand were tested as a function of pH in representative saline groundwaters.

Test solutions were synthetic seawater (ASTM D1141-98) and its diluted water (10% v/v), in which pH was adjusted to 8.5, 10 and 12 by the addition of NaOH. A carbon steel electrode and mixed buffer/sand material were packed into a titanium column using a hydraulic press. Potentiodynamic polarization curves were obtained at 20 mV/s in the potential range of -1.0 to 0 V (vs. Ag/AgCl) in a nitrogen atmosphere glove box. All tests were repeated without the mixed buffer/sand material to evaluate their effect on the electrochemical behavior of the system.

Polarization curves measured in both synthetic seawater and in diluted synthetic seawater showed no indication of passivation at pH = 8 and 10 with or without the buffer material. The case of the synthetic seawater solution alone, however,  indicated passivation at pH = 12 and a rise of the current, which was considered to be a consequence of localized corrosion. On the other hand, a decrease of the current density, which was considered to be passivation in the presence of the buffer material, was not observed, and the behavior of the current density was almost the same as the other pH condition cases. Porewater in bentonite/sand mixtures are known to dissolve in high pH solutions and was thought to be a contributing factor. 

Corrosion rates at the natural potential were estimated from the polarization curves using the Tafel extrapolation method. In synthetic seawater, the corrosion rates were 0.2-0.4 mm/y without the buffer material and generally higher at 0.2-0.3 mm/y with the buffer material. In the diluted synthetic seawater, the corrosion rates were reduced to 0.002-0.02 mm/y without the buffer material, but the initial corrosion rates were at 0.1-0.2 mm/y with the buffer material which were almost the same as the case with the synthetic seawater.

The main findings of the current study indicate that passivation of carbon steel with buffer material will be difficult in a saline environment, even at high pH = 12 conditions, and that the corrosion rate of carbon steel was more strongly affected by the presence of buffer material than by the concentration.

bentonite, carbonsteel, polarization
KitayamaAyamiJapan Atomic Energy Agencykitayama.ayami@jaea.go.jp
TaniguchiNaokiJapan Atomic Energy Agencytaniguchi.naoki@jaea.go.jp
MitsuiSeiichiroJapan Atomic Energy Agencymitsui.seiichiro@jaea.go.jp
7th International Workshop on Long-term Prediction of Corrosion Damage in Nuclear Waste Systems (LTC 2019)

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