Title: Mechanical Aspects of Corrosion
1Mechanical Aspects of Corrosion
- Bob Cottis
- Corrosion and Protection Centre, UMIST
2Mechanical Aspects of Corrosion
- Static stress
- stress-corrosion cracking
- hydrogen embrittlement
- liquid metal embrittlement
- Dynamic stress
- corrosion fatigue
- fretting corrosion
3The Effect of Stress and Strain on Corrosion
- Stress per se does not affect corrosion processes
much - Plastic strain can have a large effect
- increased dislocation density
- rupture of passive films
4Stress-Corrosion Cracking
- Cracking of a metal under the combined effects of
a static stress and a specific chemical
environment - Several possible mechanisms, still not fully
understood - Cause of major industrial costs and safety hazards
5Stress-Corrosion Cracking
- Mechanisms
- Anodic dissolution
- Hydrogen embrittlement
- Film-induced cleavage
6Anodic Dissolution
1 The walls and tip of the crack are passive
2 The passive film at the crack tip is ruptured
by the plastic strain, and active corrosion
occurs
3 The crack tip repassivates
4 Go back to 1
7Film-Induced Cleavage
1 The walls and tip of the crack are covered by a
brittle film (either an oxide film or a
de-alloyed layer)
2 The film at the crack tip is ruptured by the
plastic strain
3 The brittle crack continues into the metal
4 The crack is blunted by plastic strain
8Hydrogen Embrittlement
1 Hydrogen produced by the cathodic reaction
2 Hydrogen diffuses to region of tri-axial
tensile stress ahead of the crack
3 Hydrogen causes brittle fracture
4 Crack blunts by plastic deformation as it runs
out of hydrogen
9Hydrogen Embrittlement
- sources of hydrogen
- welding
- electroplating
- contact with gaseous hydrogen
- corrosion, especially in the presence of
sulphides - higher strength materials are more susceptible to
hydrogen embrittlement
10Hydrogen Induced Cracking
- Internal cracking of lower strength steels (e.g.
pipeline steels) due to high pressure hydrogen
collecting at inclusions.
11Hydrogen Cracking
- Internal cracking of steels at higher
temperatures due to reaction of dissolved
hydrogen with carbon to form methane
12Stress Corrosion Cracking Systems
- Brass and ammonia (often in local atmospheres).
- Austenitic stainless steels and chloride
solutions (70oC). - Carbon steels in caustic, carbonate/ bicarbonate,
nitrate and phosphate. - High strength aluminium alloys in water or water
vapour.
13Stress-Corrosion Testing
Constant Load Testing
Stress
Threshold stress
log(Time to Failure)
14Stress-Corrosion Testing
- Slow strain-rate testing (or constant extension
rate testing) - Extend a plain or pre-cracked specimen at a slow
constant rate - Then assess by
- fracture surface
- change in elongation or reduction in area
- time to failure
15Stress-Corrosion Testing
- Fracture mechanics testing
- apply a constant load to a pre-cracked specimen
- measure crack growth rate as a function of stress
intensity factor (K)
16Fracture Mechanics Testing
Fast fracture starting to occur as K approaches
KIc
Plateau crack velocity typical range of values
1011 to 103 m/s
log (crack growth rate)
Threshold stress intensity factor, KIscc
Stress Intensity Factor
17Control of Stress-Corrosion
- Remove stress (often difficult, especially for
residual stresses) - Avoid the necessary environment
- Apply electrochemical protection where possible
- Use a different material
- Live with it
18Liquid Metal Embrittlement
- Liquid metals can permeate down grain boundaries
and cause intergranular cracking - mercury on brass and aluminium alloys
- liquid zinc on stainless steel
19Corrosion Fatigue
- Metal fatigue results in crack propagation due to
a cyclic stress - Corrosion makes both crack initiation and
propagation easier
20Corrosion Fatigue - S-N Curve
Stress Amplitude
log (cycles to failure, Nf)
21Corrosion Fatigue - Crack Growth
log (Crack Growth Rate, da/dN)
Log (Stress Intensity Factor Range, ?K
22Fretting Corrosion
- Rubbing of two metals removes oxide film and
allows oxidation - The oxide may also act as an abrasive
- Prevention of relative motion and allowing larger
relative movement may prevent the problem
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