Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4436077 Applied Geochemistry 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The pressure dissolution behaviour of pyrite was investigated via its polarisation curve and using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) in a FeCl3 solution under differential stress. The results showed that the pyrite pressure dissolution process is a galvanic corrosion process and that there is a negative linear relationship between the pyrite potential difference and the stress action. The EIS experiments confirm that the pyrite was in a passive state in a 0.0010 mol L−1 FeCl3 solution and that a thin surface layer of Fe1−yS2 was present. In a 0.010 mol L−1 FeCl3 solution, the pyrite was in a trans-passive state, in which the aforementioned passive layer became porous. In a 0.10 mol L−1 FeCl3 solution, the pyrite was in an active state, the surface layer dissolved completely, and a lattice layer of S20 was created instead of a passive layer of S0. Under the present stress conditions, the stress action did not change the pyrite electrochemical dissolution mechanism; however, the conditions decreased the charge transfer resistance and passive resistance and increased the species diffusion capacitance.

► The pyrite pressure dissolution process is a galvanic corrosion process. ► There is a negative linear relationship between the pyrite potential difference and the stress action. ► Three different electrochemical dissolution mechanisms of pyrite are revealed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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