TY - JOUR
T1 - Pressure-less joining materials for SiC-based components for light water reactors
AU - Ferraris, Monica
AU - la Pierre, Stefano De
AU - Casalegno, Valentina
AU - Bosch, Rik-Wouter
AU - Marrow, James
AU - Chen, Yang
AU - Bourlet, Frédérique
AU - Lorrette, Christophe
AU - Huang, Shuigen
AU - Lambrinou, Konstantina
N1 - Score=10
Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)
PY - 2026/3
Y1 - 2026/3
N2 - Silicon carbide fiber-reinforced composites (SiC/SiC) are leading candidates to replace zirconium-based alloys as cladding in light water reactors (LWR), owing to their exceptional oxidation resistance and mechanical performance under accident conditions. However, pressure-less joining methods compatible with the extreme chemical and thermal environment of LWRs remain a major technological hurdle. This work evaluates two promising joining materials—Mo-wrap (a MoSi₂/Si composite) and SAY (a silica–alumina–yttria glass-ceramic)—under simulated LWR conditions. Joining was performed using both conventional furnaces and laser-assisted techniques. Joint integrity and microstructure were assessed by SEM/EDS and X-ray computed tomography. Hydrothermal stability was evaluated in static and flowing-water (loop) autoclaves up to 30 days at 330 °C and 150–155 bar. Mo-wrap joints showed partial degradation due to silicon dissolution, while SAY joints retained good structural integrity in static tests but suffered phase-selective corrosion under flowing conditions, with keivite emerging as the most stable crystalline phase. Laser-processed amorphous SAY joints exhibited improved corrosion resistance, though still limited under prolonged exposure. These findings advance the understanding of joining performance in nuclear-relevant environments and support the development of accident-tolerant fuel cladding.
AB - Silicon carbide fiber-reinforced composites (SiC/SiC) are leading candidates to replace zirconium-based alloys as cladding in light water reactors (LWR), owing to their exceptional oxidation resistance and mechanical performance under accident conditions. However, pressure-less joining methods compatible with the extreme chemical and thermal environment of LWRs remain a major technological hurdle. This work evaluates two promising joining materials—Mo-wrap (a MoSi₂/Si composite) and SAY (a silica–alumina–yttria glass-ceramic)—under simulated LWR conditions. Joining was performed using both conventional furnaces and laser-assisted techniques. Joint integrity and microstructure were assessed by SEM/EDS and X-ray computed tomography. Hydrothermal stability was evaluated in static and flowing-water (loop) autoclaves up to 30 days at 330 °C and 150–155 bar. Mo-wrap joints showed partial degradation due to silicon dissolution, while SAY joints retained good structural integrity in static tests but suffered phase-selective corrosion under flowing conditions, with keivite emerging as the most stable crystalline phase. Laser-processed amorphous SAY joints exhibited improved corrosion resistance, though still limited under prolonged exposure. These findings advance the understanding of joining performance in nuclear-relevant environments and support the development of accident-tolerant fuel cladding.
KW - Glass-ceramics
KW - Joining
KW - LWR
KW - Pressure-less
UR - https://ecm.sckcen.be/OTCS/llisapi.dll/open/97198957
U2 - 10.1016/j.oceram.2025.100886
DO - 10.1016/j.oceram.2025.100886
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105022632236
SN - 2666-5395
VL - 25
JO - Open Ceramics
JF - Open Ceramics
M1 - 100886
ER -