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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter August 21, 2015

Rust exfoliation on carbon steels in chloride-rich atmospheres

  • Belen Chico ORCID logo , Jenifer Alcántara , Elizabeth Pino , Iván Díaz , Joaquín Simancas , Almudena Torres-Pardo , Daniel de la Fuente , José Antonio Jiménez , José F. Marco , José María González-Calbet and Manuel Morcillo EMAIL logo
From the journal Corrosion Reviews

Abstract

The exposure of carbon steel in marine atmospheres can lead in certain circumstances to the formation of thick rust layers (containing a number of compact laminas) that are easily detached (exfoliated) from the steel substrate, leaving it unprotected and considerably accelerating the corrosion process. This deterioration phenomenon is of particular concern in steel infrastructures located close to the sea (civil constructions, bridges, etc.), whose service lifetime can be extraordinarily limited. High times of wetness of the metallic surface and high chloride ion deposition rates play a decisive role in the formation of this type of rust. Research has been carried out for 1 year in eight pure marine atmospheres with annual average chloride deposition rates of 70–1906 mg Cl-/m2 day. The studied carbon steels consisted of one mild steel, one conventional weathering steel (Corten A), and one high nickel (~3 wt.%) advanced weathering steel (AWS). The paper describes the environmental conditions that lead to the formation of these thick multilaminar rust layers and presents a characterisation study of this singular type of rust using a variety of analysis techniques: scanning electron microscopy/energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, Mössbauer spectroscopy, and transmission electron microscopy/electron diffraction. The Ni-AWS shows greater resistance to the occurrence of rust exfoliation.


Corresponding author: Manuel Morcillo, National Centre for Metallurgical Research (CENIM-CSIC), Avda. Gregorio del Amo, 8, 28040 Madrid, Spain, e-mail:

Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support for this study from the Ministry of Science and Innovation of Spain (CICYT-MAT 2008-06649 and CICYT-MAT 2012-38045-CO4-01). The authors would like to express their gratitude to the companies ENEL and GAS NATURAL for the facilities provided and for allowing the location of the corrosion stations at Cabo Vilano wind farm (Camariñas, Spain). They would also like to thank the Spanish Meteorology Agency (AEMET) for the data provided on meteorological parameters in the study area. I. Díaz also acknowledges the Ph.D. scholarship financed by CSIC JAE Programme.

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Received: 2015-4-17
Accepted: 2015-7-15
Published Online: 2015-8-21
Published in Print: 2015-9-1

©2015 by De Gruyter

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