Abstract

Abstract Galvanic corrosion of pure zinc coupled to pure copper was investigated in three different lithium bromide (LiBr) solutions (400 g/L, 700 g/L, and 850 g/L additive commercial solution) at different temperatures. The galvanic potential and the galvanic current were measured simultaneously by a zeroresistance ammeter (ZRA) at a rate of 2 Hz during a period of 24 h at 25°C, following a heating-cooling cycle from 25°C to 85°C at 0.5°C/min, during 2 h at 85°C, from 85°C to 25°C at 0.5°C/min and maintained at 25°C during the last 3 h. From the electrochemical data obtained and their subsequent statistical analysis in terms of mean values and standard deviation, it was concluded that copper-zinc coupling generated higher galvanic current in 400 g/L LiBr than in 700 g/L LiBr solution. The passivating character of the additives added to the commercial solution reduced the galvanic effect considerably. The temperature cycle imposed to the copper-zinc coupling showed that the galvanic current values at the end of the cycle were slightly higher than those measured initially.

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