Abstract

The failure mechanisms of corrosion inhibitors in highly turbulent flow remain a disputed topic. In the present study, corrosion experiments of X65 pipeline steel were performed with an imidazoline-based corrosion inhibitor using a high-shear turbulent channel flow cell, which included a flow disturbance in the form of a small protrusion. Localized corrosion was observed at the protrusion that could be mitigated with an excess inhibitor concentration. It was found that wall shear stress (up to 5000Pa) was not the cause of inhibitor failure. The flow acceleration at the leading edge of the protrusion caused a drop in pressure and led to cavitation, with bubble collapse further downstream. This was the main cause of inhibitor failure and localized corrosion. The observed behavior was interpreted in terms of corrosion inhibitor adsorption/desorption kinetics and the associated activation energy analysis.

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