The Hanford tank reservation contains approximately 50 million gallons of liquid legacy radioactive
waste from cold war weapons production, which is stored in 177 underground storage tanks. The tanks
will be in use until waste processing operations are completed. The wastes tend to be high pH (over 10)
and nitrate based. Under these alkaline conditions carbon steels tend to be passive and undergo
relatively slow uniform corrosion. However, the presence of nitrate and other aggressive species, can
lead to pitting and stress corrosion cracking. This work is a continuation of previous work that
investigated the propensity of steels to suffer pitting and stress corrosion cracking in various waste
simulants.
The focus of this work is an investigation of the sensitivity of the steels’ pitting and stress corrosion
cracking susceptibility to simulant pH. Previous work demonstrated that wastes that are high in
aggressive nitrate and low in inhibitory nitrite are susceptible to localized corrosion. However, the
previous work involved wastes with pH 12 or higher. The current work involves wastes with lower pH of
10 or 11. It is expected that at these lower pHs that a higher nitrite-to-nitrate ratio will be necessary to
ensure tank integrity. This experimental work involved both electrochemical testing, and slow strain rate
testing at either the free corrosion potential or under anodic polarization. The results of the current work
will be discussed, and compared to work previously presented.
Keywords: stress corrosion cracking, carbon steel, nitrate, nitrite, pH, Hanford, nuclear waste