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Corrosion of Titanium Alloys in High Temperature Seawater

Authors :
Daniel John Blackwood
J.J. Pang
Source :
Corrosion Science and Technology. 14:195-199
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
The Corrosion Science Society of Korea, 2015.

Abstract

Materials of choice for offshore structures and the marine industry have been increasingly favoring materials that offer high strength-to-weight ratios. One of the most promising families of light-weight materials is titanium alloys, but these do have two potential Achilles` heels: (i) the passive film may not form or may be unstable in low oxygen environments, leading to rapid corrosion; and (ii) titanium is a strong hydride former, making it vulnerable to hydrogen embrittlement (cracking) at high temperatures in low oxygen environments. Unfortunately, such environments exist at deep sea well-heads; temperatures can exceed , and oxygen levels can drop below 1 ppm. The present study demonstrates the results of investigations into the corrosion behavior of a range of titanium alloys, including newly developed alloys containing rare earth additions for refined microstructure and added strength, in artificial seawater over the temperature range of to . Tests include potentiodynamic polarization, crevice corrosion, and U-bend stress corrosion cracking.

Details

ISSN :
15986462
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Corrosion Science and Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bf37565365dc6a1b3559913a6c458ad8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.14773/cst.2015.14.4.195