In assessing molten salt compatibility with structural materials, static testing is often reported because it is easy to conduct. However, in order to assess mass transfer, where material dissolves in the salt in the hot section and may precipitate out of the liquid in colder regions, a flowing salt experiment in a temperature gradient is needed. While a forced convection or pumped loop produces prototypic flowing conditions, it also is a multi-million dollar investment. Among the less expensive dynamic testing options, the thermal convection loop (TCL) was favored during the 1960's development of molten salt reactor technology. Because the workforce and core facilities are currently available to conduct TCL experiments, it is the least expensive strategy to evaluate candidate structural alloys in flowing molten salt conditions.
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