scholarly journals Detection of localized and general corrosion of mild steel in simulated defense nuclear waste solutions using electrochemical noise analysis

1995 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.L. Edgemon ◽  
P.C. Ohl ◽  
G.E.C. Bell ◽  
D.F. Wilson
2013 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. 183-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Chen ◽  
Fahe Cao ◽  
Xiaoning Liao ◽  
Wenjuan Liu ◽  
Liyun Zheng ◽  
...  

1991 ◽  
Vol 257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guen Nakayama ◽  
Masatsune Akashi

ABSTRACTIt has been established that the mild steels which undergo the general corrosion in the acidic to neutral environments, attain the passivity status in alkaline environments, thereby becoming liable to the localized corrosion, such as pitting corrosion and crevice corrosion. Now, for the case of using bentonite as a buffer to stand between the hostrock and the geological disposal packages of high level nuclear waste, localized corrosion behaviors of mild steel as a candidate for such a package has been studied quantitatively for environments where the the otherwise neutral ground water would be turned slightly alkaline with pH = 9.5 - 10.0.In view of the lack of quantitative data on the passivity-to-localized corrosion of mild steel in natural water environments of weak alkalinity, the present authors have previously determined an empirical E-pH diagram for mild steel with a 20 °C, 1 m mol/L [HC03-], 10 ppm [CI -] solution simulating the natural water environment concerned; it has been shown that the general corrosion-to-passivity transition condition was determined to be pHd =9.4, and the mild steel was shown to be liable to localized corrosion over a large portion of the passivity domain. The present paper discusses behaviors, mechanisms, and critical conditions for initiation of localized corrosion in mild steel placed in bentonitesuspending natural water environment, in terms of the critical potentials for pitting (Vc), and crevice corrosion (ER,CREV). Bentonite was addid to the solution in varying amounts to give bentonite-to-solution ratios up to 0.1, while the pHvalue was adjusted appropriately with sodium carbonate, always keeping the bentonite particles in suspension.It is demonstrated that bentonite particles suspended in water will deposit upon the steel on receipt of Fe2 + ions, thereby promoting pitting corrosion by preventing repassivation and promoting crevice corrosion by acting as an effective crevice, once the environment conditions become favorable for localized corrosion.We conclude therefore that disposal package made of mild steel and placed in an underground water environment with bentonite as buffer will be liable to localized corrosion.


1996 ◽  
Vol 451 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guen Nakayama ◽  
Yuichi Fukaya ◽  
Masatsune Akashi

ABSTRACTIn the scheme for geological disposal of high level radioactive nuclear wastes, the burial pit is to be isolated from the sphere of human life by a multiple-barrier system, which consists of an artificial barrier, composed of a canister, an overpack and a bentonite cushioning layer, and a natural barrier, which is essentially the bedrock. As the greatest as well as essentially the sole detriment to its integrity would be corrosion by groundwater. The groundwater comes to it seeping through the bentonite zone, thereby attaining conceivably the pH of transition from general corrosion to passivity, pHd, the behaviors of mild steel in such a groundwater environment have been examined. It has been shown that the pHd is lowered (enlargement of the passivity domain) with rising temperature and carbonate-bicarbonate concentration, while it is raised (enlargement of the general corrosion region) with increasing concentrations of chloride and sulfate ions.


2004 ◽  
Vol 04 (03) ◽  
pp. R39-R55 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. MONTESPERELLI ◽  
G. GUSMANO

This paper gives an overview of the use of Electrochemical Noise (EN) for corrosion studying and monitoring. Since the quality and reliability of noise data are affected by a number of acquisition parameters, such as sampling interval, sampling duration, D.C. trend and instrumental noise, some experimental and practical aspects were discussed. The use of statistical parameters such as standard deviation, Pit Index and/or Localization Index and Noise Resistance to analyze noise data of corroding systems were examined. Many experimental applications of Electrochemical Noise Measurements on different metals and alloys were given. EN data have been compared with traditional electrochemical techniques. EN allowed to characterize the corrosion behavior of samples giving in some cases good quantitative estimation. The transposition of current and potential noise acquisition in the frequency domain (by Fast Fourier Transform and/or Maximum Entropy Method), gave further information on corrosion mechanism and in particular permitted to identify the type of corrosion. Finally the use of Discriminant Analysis permitted to deduce the best sampling frequency and sampling duration for EN acquisition, able to discriminate between two different situations.


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