Corrosion Engineering Lecture 2
Corrosion Engineering Lecture 2
EBT402 - Lecture 2
Introduction to corrosion
Text Books:
1. Fontana M.G. (1986), Corrosion Engineering, 3rd edition, New York,
McGraw Hill
2. Zaki Ahmad (2006), Principle of Corrosion Engineering and Corrosion
Control, 1st edition, UK, Butterworth-Heinermann
Reference Books:
Batchelor A.W. Lam,N.L.,Chandrasekaran,M.(2000), Materials Degradation
and Its Control by Surface Engineering, Imperial College Press.
Wranglen, Gosta(1985), Introduction to Corrosion and Protection of Metals,
Chapman and Hall.
Donald R. Askeland, Pradeep P. Phule, 4th Edition, The science and
Enginnering of Materials.
J.J. Moore, 2nd Edition, Chemical Metallurgy.
What is Corrosion
A complex chemical or electrochemical process of
material being destroyed through reaction with its
environment
Example: When the metal is iron, the process is called
rusting. Rust is the corrosion product
Corrosion: irreversible interfacial reaction of a material
(metal, ceramic, polymer) with its environment
Metals: high electric conductivity electrochemical
corrosion
Electrically non-conducting materials: physico-chemical
principles.
Terminology
Corrode:
cause to deteriorate due to the action of water, air, or an acid.
to wear away or diminish by gradually, as by rusting or by the
action of chemicals
Environment
Practically all environments are corrosive to some degree
Example:
air and moisture
fresh, distilled and mine waters
rural, urban, and industrial atmospheres
steam and other gases: chlorine, ammonia
mineral acids: hydrochloric, sulfuric, and nitric
organic acids: naphthenic, acetic and formic
Alkalis: KOH, NaOH
Soil, solvents, vegetable and petroleum oil, a
variety of food products
p/s: Inorganic materials are more corrosive than
organic.
.
Safety
Conservation
Economics
Aim to reduce the material losses resulted from
corrosion
Waste of metal, water, human efforts, rebuilding cost
Need further investment
Losses: direct vs. indirect
Corrosion damage
How the world economy would be drastically
changed if there were no corrosion?
Appearance:
Automobiles, ship, pipeline are painted/coated because rusted surfaces are not
pleasing to the eye
Badly rusted equipment: poor impression
Direct loss
Direct loss: cost of replacing corroded structure,
machine, repainting, use corrosion resistance metal,
protection cost (cathodic protection maintenance,
galvanizing, inhibitor)
Fact: USD 276 billion or 3.1 % of US GDP loss due to corrosion
25-30 % can be avoided if current tech were effectively applied
3-4 % of GDP for Japan, UK, Australia
Indirect loss
Direct loss: easier to estimate/assess
Indirect loss: difficult to assess
E.g.: to replace corroded part may be cheap, but it
requires plant shutdown
Direct loss: replace parts
Indirect loss: plant shutdown (higher loss amount
involve)
Imagine boiler in a power plant: boiler is down, yet the
customers need electrical energy: need to purchase
energy: $$$
Case study
Mining, 1.2%
Extrapolated
Corrosion Costs: $276
billion, 3.1%
Agriculture, 1.5%
Federal Government,
4.1%
Services, 20.9%
Construction, 4.3%
Wholesale Trade,
7.0%
Transportation and
Utilities, 8.3%
Finance, Insurance
and Real Estate,
19.2%
Gas Transmission
Natural Gas Lines 328,000 Miles
Production
Natural
Gas
Hazardous
Liquids
2,000K miles
156K miles
Facilities
Transmission
Transmission
300K miles
135K miles
Distribution
1,700K miles
Crude Oil
Liquid Products
53K miles
82K miles
Gathering
28K miles
Gathering
21K miles
Certification
30% of Companies has personnel dedicated to Corrosion Control
Regulations require Certification of Corrosion Control Staff
Annual Cost $32.4 Million
High
Estimate
($ x M)
($ x M)
($ x M)
Cost of Capital
2,500
2.840
2,670
38
2,420
4,840
3,630
52
471
875
673
10
5,391
8,555
6,973
100
Average
Drinking Water
Sewage Water
Costs in Operation, Maintenance, Finance, Capital
Investments
Maintenance crews find and repair leaks, but the number of
leaks increases with system age.
Leaking water
Corrosion products in the water
Capacity too small for the area
Assume 50% of all operation and maintenance costs
are corrosion-related
B$19.25
Sewer systems
B$13.75
B$3.0
TOTAL
B$36.0
Safety
Corrosion cause failure: leads to accident
May took place in workplace or home
E.g.: every 15 secs, 160 workers have a work-related
accident
every 15 secs, a worker dies from a work-related
accident or disease
What is the differences between accident, incident, nearmiss and incidence????
Risk management
Risk is a formula
Risk = likelihood x severity
Likelihood vs probability??
Can be positive or negative
Positive: gain benefit
Negative: gain losses
In safety, risk is only negative
The management of safety risk is focused on prevention
and mitigation of harm
RISK
Conservation
Inherent ability to
form an insoluble
protective film
Factors
Associated
Mainly
with the
Metal
Chemical and physical
homogeneity of the metal
surface
Overvoltage of
hydrogen on the
metal
Temperature
Influence of
oxygen in
solution
adjacent to
the metal
Factors Which
Vary Mainly
with the
Environment
Hydrogen-ion
concentration (pH)
in the solution
Cyclic stress
(corrosion fatigue)
Ability of
environment to form
a protective deposit
on the metal
Corrosion
classification
By thermal
By process
By condition
By thermal
Low temperature corrosion
Very common
By process
Chemical corrosion: oxidation
Electrochemical corrosion: Metal atoms are removed
from the solid material as the result of an electric circuit
that is produced.
By condition:
Wet corrosion:
Req. liquid, involves aqueous or electrolytes
accounts for the greatest amount of corrosion by far
example: corrosion of steel by water.
Dry corrosion
Engineers:
Applies scientific knowledge to control corrosion
Cathodic protection to prevent corrosion on pipelines,
develop better paints, prescribe proper dosage of
inhibitors, recommend correct coating
Types of Corrosion
1. Uniform Corrosion
2. Galvanic Corrosion
3. Crevice Corrosion
4. Pitting Corrosion
5. Intergranular Corrosion
6. Selective Leaching
7. Erosion Corrosion
8. Stress Corrosion
Hydrogen Damage
Fretting Corrosion
Corrosion fatigue
Prevention:
Galvanic Corrosion
Crevice Corrosion
Localized form of corrosion
Associated with a stagnant solution on the micro-environmental
level.
E.g.: under gaskets, washers, insulation materials, fastener heads,
surface deposits, disbonded coatings, threads, lap joints and
clamps.
Metal-metal; metal-non metal
Initiated by changes in local chemistry within the crevice:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Pitting Corrosion
Intergranular Corrosion
intergranular corrosion
Transgranular or
intragranular corrosion
Further reading
Erosion Corrosion
Hydrogen Embrittlement
Seriously reduce the ductility and load-bearing capacity, cause cracking and
catastrophic brittle failures at stresses below the yield stress of susceptible materials.
Hydrogen embrittlement does not affect all metallic materials equally. The most
vulnerable are high-strength steels, titanium alloys and aluminum alloys.
Fretting Corrosion
Damage can occur at the interface of two highly loaded surface which are
not designed to move against each other.
The protective film on the metal surfaces is removed by the rubbing action
Corrosion Fatigue
Thank you