General information
Organisation
The French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) is a key player in research, development and innovation in four main areas :
• defence and security,
• nuclear energy (fission and fusion),
• technological research for industry,
• fundamental research in the physical sciences and life sciences.
Drawing on its widely acknowledged expertise, and thanks to its 16000 technicians, engineers, researchers and staff, the CEA actively participates in collaborative projects with a large number of academic and industrial partners.
The CEA is established in ten centers spread throughout France
Reference
SL-DAM-25-0872
Direction
DAM
Thesis topic details
Category
Condensed Matter Physics, chemistry, nanosciences
Thesis topics
Study of corrosion mechanisms of ceramics in molten chlorides salts
Contract
Thèse
Job description
CEA Valduc operates processes involving molten salts. These salts, based on chloride compounds, can exhibit corrosive properties, particularly in the presence of impurities that lead to oxygen contamination. This results in the degradation of materials used in these processes. The study proposed here aims to understand these degradation mechanisms in order to identify the materials that best meet the needs of CEA Valduc. Beyond the specific requirements of CEA Valduc, this study also fits more broadly within ongoing research efforts to understand and mitigate corrosion in high-temperature molten salts environments, a major technological challenge for advanced modular reactors (AMRs).
The proposed work aims to study and compare various refractory materials in contact with chloride salts. Oxide materials (MgO, Y2O3, Ta2O5) and carbides (TaC) will be investigated in contact with CaCl2, NaCl, and KCl salts. The solubility of these materials in different molten salt media will be measured. The ultimate goal is to evaluate the behavior of these materials under aggressive conditions and to understand the mechanisms of their degradation.
Several studies have highlighted the predominant role of the material microstructure in relation to chemical durability. Initial characterization of the materials will be carried out using the facilities of Institute Jean Lamour (SEM/TEM, XRD). A thermodynamic study using the FactSage software will also be performed to predict material behavior and possible chemical reactions. The core of the thesis will consist of corrosion tests. Solubility constants of these different materials in chloride salts will be measured, followed by an investigation of phenomena occurring at the salt/material interface on sintered samples. Literature underscores the crucial influence of oxygen content on the corrosive nature of molten salts. Precise control and in situ measurement of oxygen levels is therefore critical for this work. To this end, the PhD candidate will have access to CEA’s facilities that enable work under inert atmosphere and analytical electrochemical measurements. Post-corrosion elemental analyses (ICP-AES/MS, UV-Vis spectroscopy) of the salts will be combined with microstructural characterizations of the samples to propose corrosion mechanisms for each material.
All experiments will take place at the CEA Valduc site, with occasional travel required to the IJL facilities in Nancy.
University / doctoral school
Université de Lorraine
Thesis topic location
Site
Valduc
Requester
Position start date
01/10/2025
Person to be contacted by the applicant
DALGER Thomas
thomas.dalger@cea.fr
CEA
DAM/CVA/CVA
CEA - DAM
centre de Valduc
21120 IS SUR TILLE
03 80 23 40 15
Tutor / Responsible thesis director
Petitjean Carine
carine.petitjean@univ-lorraine.fr
Université de Lorraine
Institut Jean Lamour
Université de Lorraine
Institut Jean Lamour - UMR 7198
Dépt 2 : Chimie et Physique des Solides et des Surfaces
Equipe 206: Surface et Interface, Réactivité Chimique des Matériaux
Campus ARTEM
2 allée André Guinier
54000 NANCY
03.72.74.27.38
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