Abstract

In order to evaluate the effect of chromium content in carbon steel on the corrosion resistance of carbon steel materials, the corrosion behavior of 1Cr and N80 steels was investigated in this study by immersion weight loss method under three different CO2 partial pressure and temperature conditions in formation water for 72, 168 and 336 h. Detailed material surface morphological characterization was performed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). The results show that the pitting corrosion of N80 carbon steel is serious at medium temperature and low CO2 partial pressure (50 °C, 0.30 MPa), and the corrosion rate is significantly higher than that of 1Cr steel. However, at high-temperature and high CO2 partial pressure (100 °C/0.63 MPa and 114 °C/0.73 MPa), 1Cr steel is more inclined to the mesa corrosion dominated by local corrosion characteristics, and the corrosion rate is seriously higher than that of N80 steel with uniform corrosion. From the experimental results, we can know the corrosion resistance of carbon steel and 1Cr steel is not only affected by the corrosion environment, but also depends on the formation process of the product film, as well as its compactness and integrity characteristics. At low-temperature and low CO2 partial pressure, 1 wt.% chromium content can provide a certain degree of corrosion resistance, while high temperature and high partial pressure can broaden the application window of carbon steel N80 and weaken the corrosion inhibition effect of chromium.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call