Abstract

AbstractCorrosion products that form on carbon steel in sweet (CO2) environments can protect the steel by retarding interactions between the substrate steel and a corrosive electrolyte. Such protective films could become damaged at local sites leading to potential differences and the emergence of galvanic currents with the consequence of pitting in certain envfironments. The large protected surface (with a higher positive potential) becomes a cathode while the tiny exposed surface (with a lower positive potential) becomes the anode. Films formed in a Ca2+‐rich environment often comprise mixed calcium and iron carbonates in the form, CaxFe(1−x)CO3. This work utilized an artificial pit to investigate pitting under CaxFe(1−x)CO3 film conditions. Mixed carbonate films were grown on cathode discs (25‐mm diameter) for 96 h at pH 7.5, 50°C. Freshly polished anode pins were screwed onto the cathode disc and the galvanic currents were measured for 24 h. The anode/cathode area ratios were varied by using pins of 1, 2, and 3 mm diameter. Scanning electron microscope, X‐ray powder diffraction, and energy‐dispersive X‐ray were employed to examine the electrode surfaces after the test while surface profilometry was conducted to obtain pit profiles on the anode pins. Galvanic current increased with the addition of 682 ppm Ca2+ to the solution while pseudopassivation occurred under mixed calcium–iron carbonate films. The galvanic current was observed to drop as corrosion products formed on the anode electrode. Profilometry revealed the emergence of pits on the anode electrode. The pitting threshold was commensurate with the magnitude of the galvanic current density recorded.

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