October 1, 2012
Conference Paper

Development of a Mechanistic-Based Healing Model for Self-Healing Glass Seals

Abstract

Self-healing glass, a recent development of hermetic sealant materials, has the ability to effectively repair damage when heated to elevated temperatures; thus, able to extend its service life. Since crack healing morphological changes in the glass material are usually temperature and stress dependent, quantitative studies to determine the effects of thermo-mechanical conditions on the healing behavior of the self-healing glass sealants are extremely useful to accommodate the design and optimization of the sealing systems within SOFCs. The goal of this task is to develop a mechanistic-based healing model to quantify the stress and temperature dependent healing behavior. A two-step healing mechanism was developed and implemented into finite element (FE) models through user-subroutines. Integrated experimental/kinetic Monte Carlo (kMC) simulation methodology was taken to calibrate the model parameters. The crack healing model is able to investigate the effects of various thermo-mechanical factors; therefore, able to determine the critical conditions under which the healing mechanism will be activated. Furthermore, the predicted results can be used to formulate the continuum damage-healing model and to assist the SOFC stack level simulations in predicting and evaluating the effectiveness and the performance of various engineering seal designs.

Revised: December 17, 2013 | Published: October 1, 2012

Citation

Xu W., E.V. Stephens, X. Sun, M.A. Khaleel, and H.M. Zbib. 2012. Development of a Mechanistic-Based Healing Model for Self-Healing Glass Seals. In 13th Annual Solid State Energy Conversion Alliance (SECA) Workshop, July 24-27, 2012, Pittsburgh, PA. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania:National Energy Technology Laboratory. PNNL-SA-88778.