Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1472404 Corrosion Science 2006 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Type 904L austenitic stainless steel with a critical pitting temperature (CPT) of 56 °C was polarized at 750 mV (Ag/AgCl) in 1 M NaCl at 45, 49 and 54 °C. Current transients due to metastable pitting were recorded at these three temperatures, and a smaller number of stable pit current transients were recorded at 62 °C. The metastable pit current, I, followed a power law relationship I ∼ tn during initial growth prior to repassivation. The exponent n increased with temperature, from 0.5 to 1.5. To grow at the lower temperatures, the pits need to be more occluded (lower value of n; lower pit current density). The repassivated metastable pits showed two morphologies: small occluded cavities associated with the small transients, and open ones with polished surfaces for large transients recorded close to the CPT. A new type of deterministic repassivation was identified for the latter type of pit. The stable pit currents rose in proportion to t3/2, just like the faster-growing metastable pits, but only for a few seconds; then there was a drop in current and a further noisy increase occurred with a lower exponent. These pits undercut the metal surface, producing a lacy metal cover. The results are broadly consistent with a model that attributes the CPT to the onset of passivation in the saturated pit solution. A new feature requiring explanation is that, very close to the CPT, pits can precipitate a salt film but fail to undercut the surface. It is hypothesized that since a higher anodic current density is required at the undercutting site than at the pit base, there will be a range of temperatures where the former but not the latter would exceed the critical current density for passivation and is thus disallowed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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