Effect of temperature and thiosulphate on the corrosion behaviour of 90‐10 copper‐nickel alloys in seawater
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the effect of seawater temperature on the corrosion behaviour of 90‐10 cupronickel alloys. Also, to investigate the effect of thiosulphate additions (one of the major sulphide oxidation products in seawater) on the alloy corrosion rate in seawater.
Design/methodology/approach
Potentiodynamic polarization measurement (DC) was used to estimate the corrosion rate of the cupronickel alloy in seawater with and without thiosulphate species (50‐650 ppm).
Findings
It was observed that the cupronickel alloy suffered accelerated corrosion as the seawater temperature was raised from 25 to 50 or 80°C. The increase in the corrosion rate was found to correspond well with the negative shift in the free corrosion potential. Thiosulphate addition was found to depend on the test temperature. At 25°C, thiosulphate activated the alloy dissolution rate and the higher were the thiosulphate concentrations, the higher was the corrosion rate. At 50 or 80°C, however, thiosulphate promoted the dissolution rate at early stages, but seemed to interfere with the surface film formation later on, producing a black film that effectively decreased the alloy corrosion rate. At higher potentials, however, the film became non‐protective, leading to accelerated corrosion once again.
Originality/value
This paper explains the corrosion behaviour of 90‐10 cupronickel alloys in seawater as a function of test temperature and thiosulphate additions.
Keywords
Citation
Ezuber, H.M. (2009), "Effect of temperature and thiosulphate on the corrosion behaviour of 90‐10 copper‐nickel alloys in seawater", Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, Vol. 56 No. 3, pp. 168-172. https://doi.org/10.1108/00035590910955531
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited