Corrosion engineering Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Corrosion – the natural tendency of metals (and other conductive materials) to revert to their stable, non‑metallic mineral state when exposed to an environment.
Corrosion engineering – discipline that applies chemistry, electrochemistry, kinetics, and materials science to manage and mitigate this inevitable degradation.
Driving force – thermodynamic inevitability; metals extracted from ores are metastable and will seek the lower‑energy mineral form.
Scope – not limited to metals; also includes ceramics, cement, composites, graphite, and related degradation modes (cracking, fretting, erosion).
Corrosion environments – external (soil, water, air) vs. internal (inside pipelines, tanks, vessels).
Key mechanisms – galvanic (bimetallic), pitting, crevice, stress corrosion cracking (SCC), filiform, corrosion fatigue, selective leaching, microbial (biocorrosion), hydrogen damage, erosion, high‑temperature oxidation.
Protection strategies – cathodic protection (sacrificial anodes or impressed‑current), protective coatings (barrier, functional, hot‑dip galvanizing), corrosion inhibitors (oxidizing, scavenging, adsorption, vapor‑phase, hydrogen‑evolution retarders), and design for corrosion resistance (geometry, material thickness, anodic‑cathodic balance).
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📌 Must Remember
Thermodynamic inevitability → corrosion will occur unless a kinetic barrier (coating, inhibitor, cathodic protection) is imposed.
Galvanic corrosion: the more active (anodic) metal corrodes preferentially when electrically coupled to a more noble metal in an electrolyte.
Pitting & Crevice: highly localized; small material loss can cause catastrophic failure.
SCC triad – requires (1) corrosive environment, (2) tensile stress, (3) susceptible material.
Cathodic protection
Sacrificial‑anode: zinc, magnesium, or aluminium anodes dissolve preferentially.
Impressed‑current: external DC source forces the structure to become cathodic.
Coating function – barrier (prevent electrolyte contact) or sacrificial (provide anodic metal).
Inhibitor classes –
Oxidizing: form protective films.
Scavenging: neutralize O₂, Cl⁻, etc.
Adsorption: adsorb onto metal surface.
Vapor‑phase: volatilize into confined spaces.
Hydrogen‑evolution retarders: slow H₂ generation.
Material vulnerabilities –
Al, Zn‑galvanized steel, brass, Cu → rapid in strong acid/alkaline.
Cu/Brass → poor in high nitrate/ammonia.
Carbon steel/Fe → fast in low‑resistivity, high‑Cl⁻ soils.
Concrete → degraded by high sulfate, acidity, chloride penetration.
Design rules – keep anodic area ≥ cathodic area; avoid sharp corners; avoid welding dissimilar metals; increase thickness where corrosion is unavoidable.
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🔄 Key Processes
Soil‑environment assessment
Collect samples → test pH, resistivity (Wenner four‑pin or saturated), chlorides, sulfates, ammonia, nitrates, sulfide, redox potential.
Cathodic protection design (sacrificial)
Determine required anode mass → select alloy (Zn, Mg, Al) → install anodes → verify structure potential (≤ −0.85 V vs Cu/CuSO₄ for steel).
Cathodic protection design (impressed‑current)
Survey soil resistivity → size rectifier → place anodes (Ti, mixed metal) → set current density (≈ 5–15 mA m⁻² for steel) → monitor with DCVG surveys.
Coating application workflow
Surface preparation (cleaning, grit‑blasting) → primer → intermediate coat → topcoat → cure → schedule regular inspection.
Inhibitor dosing
Identify aggressive species → select inhibitor class → calculate dosage (ppm level) → monitor corrosion rate (e.g., weight loss, electrochemical methods).
SCC mitigation
Remove tensile stress (stress‑relief heat treatment), select resistant alloy, control environment (pH, chloride, temperature).
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🔍 Key Comparisons
Galvanic vs. Uniform corrosion
Galvanic: localized, requires dissimilar metals + electrolyte.
Uniform: spread evenly over surface, same metal throughout.
Sacrificial‑anode vs. Impressed‑current CP
Sacrificial: simple, no external power, limited current, best for small/isolated structures.
Impressed‑current: controllable current, suitable for large pipelines, requires monitoring.
Pitting vs. Crevice corrosion
Pitting: pits initiate at surface defects; chemistry of bulk electrolyte controls.
Crevice: confined space creates differential chemistry; often more aggressive than pitting.
Stainless steel vs. Carbon steel
Stainless: passive film needed (oxygen present); can fail in deoxygenated or chloride‑rich crevices.
Carbon steel: cheaper, adequate where environment is less aggressive; can be protected with coatings/inhibitors.
Barrier coating vs. Sacrificial coating
Barrier: physically isolates metal (e.g., epoxy, paint).
Sacrificial: provides anodic metal that corrodes in place of substrate (e.g., hot‑dip galvanizing).
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Stainless steel never corrodes.”
Fails in low‑oxygen, chloride‑rich, or crevice environments.
“Galvanizing eliminates all corrosion forever.”
Zinc eventually exhausts; coating defects can expose underlying steel.
“Thicker paint always means better protection.”
Over‑thick layers can trap moisture, leading to under‑film corrosion (filiform).
“All cathodic protection works without monitoring.”
Potentials drift; regular DCVG or potential checks are essential.
“Inhibitors are only for internal corrosion.”
Inhibitors are also used in external systems (e.g., spray‑inhibitor coatings).
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
Corrosion as a battery – think of the metal as the anode, the environment as the electrolyte, and any coupled noble metal as the cathode; electrons flow from the anode to cathode, just like a simple galvanic cell.
Protective coating = armor – a perfect armor blocks the enemy (electrolyte); a damaged piece creates a “hole” where the enemy can attack (localized corrosion).
Sacrificial anode = “cannon fodder” – the anode is deliberately chosen to corrode first, protecting the “real” structure.
Design geometry = “stress concentrator map” – sharp corners concentrate electrochemical currents → more corrosion; round them out to “smooth the current”.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Stainless steel – can suffer crevice corrosion in stagnant, low‑oxygen pockets despite its passive film.
Aluminum – especially prone to erosion corrosion where turbulent flow removes its protective oxide.
High sulfide / low redox – promotes biogenic sulfide corrosion (microbial) even in otherwise benign soils.
Low‑resistivity, high‑chloride soils – accelerate carbon steel corrosion; standard cathodic protection may need higher current densities.
Hot‑dip galvanizing – provides both barrier and sacrificial protection, but zinc‑rich areas can be less protective in highly alkaline soils.
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📍 When to Use Which
Choose sacrificial vs. impressed‑current CP
Small, isolated structures, limited access: sacrificial anodes.
Long pipelines, high current demand, ability to monitor: impressed‑current.
Select coating type
Underground steel in soil: hot‑dip galvanizing (sacrificial + barrier).
Pipeline interior: fusion‑bonded epoxy (barrier) + internal inhibitor.
Atmospheric structures with occasional splash: epoxy or polyurethane over zinc‑rich primer.
Pick inhibitor class
High chloride: scavenging inhibitor (chloride complexation).
Oxidizing environments: oxidizing inhibitor (forms protective film).
Closed confined spaces: vapor‑phase inhibitor (volatile, reaches hidden surfaces).
Material selection
Deoxygenated, low‑pH environments: carbon steel with coating > stainless.
High‑temperature, oxidative gases: high‑temperature alloys or protective oxide‑forming coatings.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
Localized attack + chloride → suspect pitting or crevice corrosion.
Turbulent flow + soft metal (Al, Mg) → erosion corrosion.
Presence of bacteria, sulfide odor, low redox → microbial (biogenic) corrosion.
Sharp corners, weld seams, dissimilar metal joins → likely sites for galvanic or stress‑concentrated corrosion.
Repeated coating failures at same spot → filiform corrosion beneath paint.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
“Galvanic corrosion only occurs in seawater.” – It occurs anywhere two dissimilar metals share an electrolyte (soil, fresh water, even humid air).
“Impressed‑current cathodic protection never requires maintenance.” – Rectifier output drifts; coating damage can cause over‑protection (hydrogen evolution).
“All stainless steels are immune to SCC.” – Only certain grades (e.g., 304) are SCC‑susceptible in chloride environments; others (316) are more resistant.
“Increasing coating thickness linearly increases service life.” – Beyond optimal thickness, adhesion can suffer and moisture entrapment may accelerate under‑film corrosion.
“Hydrogen‑evolution retarders eliminate all hydrogen damage.” – They reduce rate but cannot fully stop hydrogen ingress in high‑temperature, high‑pressure environments.
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