96 resultados para Steel corrosion


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An organic salt comprising of an imidazolinium cation and a 4-hydroxy cinnamate anion has been shown to be a viable inhibitor for reducing the corrosion of steel in 0.01M NaCl aqueous solutions under acidic, neutral and basic conditions. The efficiency is particularly high at pH 8 (86%). Of most significance is that the individual components of this compound do not inhibit as effectively at equivalent concentrations, particularly at a pH of 2, suggesting there is a true synergy resulting from the combination of anion and cation. The immersion studies show the efficacy of these inhibitors to stifle corrosion as observed from optical, SEM and profilometry experiments. The mechanism of inhibition appears to be dominated by anodic behavior and further surface characterization work will investigate the origin of this inhibition and the synergy observed.

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All rights reserved.Chromium (VI) compounds are commonly used in paint systems to provide corrosion protection, particularly for aerospace alloys. These compounds are toxic, carcinogenic and environmentally detrimental, therefore alternatives that are safe, environmentally benign and meet or exceed current levels of corrosion protection are vital. Multifunctional rare earth organic compounds incorporate known inhibitor species, achieving synergistic inhibition in corrosive environments. The mechanism, efficiency and surface interactions of these complexes are explored. The complexes were effective inhibitors for steel and aluminium alloys, through mixed inhibition. Advantages and limitations of these inhibitor complexes, along with applications and future research direction, are discussed.

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This research proposes two new electrochemical methods for measuring corrosion rates and their distribution under cathodic protection (CP). These methods were incorporated into a corrosion monitoring sensor that grow a great interest in the Australian energy pipeline industry.

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Ultra-high strength steel sheets have been subjected to heat treatments that simulate the thermal cycles in hot-dip galvanising and galvannealing processes and evaluated with respect to their resulting mechanical properties and microstructures. The steels contained suitable contents of carbon (∼0.2%), manganese (1.2%) and chromium (0.4%) to ensure that they could be fully transformed to martensite after austenitisation followed by rapid cooling in a continuous annealing line, prior to galvanising. Different contents of vanadium (0–0.1%) and nitrogen (0.002–0.012%) were used to investigate the possible role of these microalloying elements on the strength of the tempered martensite. Vanadium, especially when in combination with a raised nitrogen content, helps to resist the effect of tempering so that a larger proportion of the initial strengthening is preserved after the galvanising cycle, giving tensile strength levels exceeding 1000 MPa. Different deoxidation practices using aluminium or silicon have also been included. These showed similar strength levels at corresponding carbon contents but the bendability of the Si-killed steel sheet was considerably superior. Microstructural examinations have been made on the annealed steels but the reason for the beneficial effect of vanadium is still not fully explained. It is concluded that microalloying with vanadium is a very promising approach in the development of corrosion-resistant ultra-high strength steel sheet products.

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Low-temperature active-screen plasma nitriding is an effective surface engineering technology to improve the wear and corrosion resistance of austenitic stainless steel through the formation of expanded austenite. The material sputtered from the active screen and redeposited on the specimens has been suggested to play an important role in the nitriding mechanism involved. This paper reports a patterned deposition layer, which is in correlation with the grain orientation of polycrystalline specimens. This has provided new insights into the nitriding mechanism. © 2012 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Low temperature diffusion treatments with nitrogen and carbon have been widely used to increase the tribological performance of austenitic stainless steels. These processes produce a layer of supersaturated austenite, usually called expanded austenite or S-phase, which exhibits good corrosion and wear resistance. The novel active screen technology is said to provide benefits over the conventional DC plasma technology. The improvements result from the reduction in the electric potential applied to the treated components, and the elimination of such defects and processing instabilities as edge effects, hollow cathode effects and arcing. In this study, AISI 316 coupon samples were plasma carburised in DC and active screen plasma furnaces. The respective layers of carbon expanded austenite were characterised and their tribological performance was studied and compared. Detailed post-test examinations included SEM observations of the wear tracks and of the wear debris, EDX mapping of the wear track, EBSD crystal orientation mapping of the cross sections of the wear tracks, and cross-sectional TEM. Based on the results of wear tests and post-test examinations, the wear mechanisms involved are discussed.