Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1472331 | Corrosion Science | 2005 | 26 Pages |
Semi-hard tubes of deoxidized high phosphorous copper with different levels of tangential residual stresses have been exposed to nitrite solutions in a laboratory heating circuit. After characterization of investigated materials influence of temperature, location of heating, concentration of solution, electrochemical potential, and atmosphere on stress corrosion cracking susceptibility of those copper tubes has been investigated. Threshold stress for crack initiation has been determined. Maximum duration of experiments was 1 month. Breakthrough time of tubes has been measured as criterion for susceptibility to SCC.To vary stress level in a wider range constant load tests on tubes with different degrees of cold working (annealed, semi-hard, hard) were done by mounting them in a steel frame.Stress corrosion cracks were always intergranular. A tenorite layer covered surface of cracked copper tubes. A reaction scheme for ammonia formation is presented. Necessary conditions for formation of stress corrosion are shown and critically discussed.Results show that intergranular cracking takes place at much lower stress levels below yield strength when compared to literature data on transgranular cracking above yield strength. For transgranular cracking cross slipping and cleavage formation as cracking mechanism is confirmed while for intergranular cracking chemical dissolution of grain boundaries plays a more important role.