The corrosion of 90:10 Cu:Ni and 70:30 Cu:Ni alloys in sulfide polluted flowing sea water has been studied as a function of sulfide concentration. The experimental techniques used include small amplitude cyclic voltammetry, AC impedance measurements, large amplitude cyclic voltammetry, and extensive surface examination by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) analysis, X-ray diffraction, and Auger electron spectrometry (AES). It is shown that the presence of sulfide induces a loss in passivity of the alloy surface due to the formation of cuprous sulfide as the principal corrosion product. Furthermore, accelerated corrosion of these materials in sulfide polluted sea water appears to arise from a shift in the corrosion potential to sufficiently active values that hydrogen evolution becomes a viable cathodic process.
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1 August 1979
Research Article|
August 01 1979
The Corrosion of Cu-Ni Alloys 706 and 715 in Flowing Sea Water. II — Effect of Dissolved Sulfide
Sharon S. Wing
Sharon S. Wing
*Materials Research Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, California.
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Received:
March 01 1978
Revision Received:
August 01 1978
Online ISSN: 1938-159X
Print ISSN: 0010-9312
© 1979 National Association of Corrosion Engineers
1979
CORROSION (1979) 35 (8): 367–378.
Article history
Received:
March 01 1978
Revision Received:
August 01 1978
Citation
Digby D. Macdonald, Barry C. Syrett, Sharon S. Wing; The Corrosion of Cu-Ni Alloys 706 and 715 in Flowing Sea Water. II — Effect of Dissolved Sulfide. CORROSION 1 August 1979; 35 (8): 367–378. https://doi.org/10.5006/0010-9312-35.8.367
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