Abstract

AbstractThe behavior of steel coupons buried in soil under cathodic protection (CP) was studied during wet/dry cycles using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and voltammetry. The coupons were left at open circuit potential for 7 days before applying CP for 51 days at potentials of −0.8 and −1.0 V versus Cu/CuSO4 on coupons 1 and 2, respectively. Wet/dry cycling was achieved by first saturating the soil with an electrolyte inside a sealed electrochemical cell and by allowing the soil to dry by opening the top lid of the cell for various periods in the experiment. Surface analysis was performed after the experiments by X‐ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. The soil electrolyte resistance Rs depended mainly on the variations of soil moisture for coupon 1 but was strongly affected by the effects induced by CP for coupon 2. Residual corrosion rates of 17–18 and 7–10 µm/year for coupons 1 and 2, respectively, were estimated via voltammetry. The kinetic parameters vary with the polarization level so that the data obtained with a coupon polarized at a given potential cannot be used to predict the residual corrosion rate of a coupon polarized at another potential.

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