Abstract

Occurrence of stress corrosion cracking of pipelines under a near-neutral pH condition depends on the synergism of stress, hydrogen and anodic dissolution at the crack tip of the steel. In this work, micro-electrochemical techniques, including localized electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and scanning vibrating electrode technique, were used to characterize quantitatively the synergistic effects of hydrogen and stress on local dissolution at crack-tip of a X70 pipeline steel in a near-neutral pH solution. Results demonstrate that, upon hydrogen-charging, the anodic dissolution of the steel is enhanced. The resistance of the deposited corrosion product layer depends on the charging current density. There is a non-uniform dissolution rate on the cracked steel specimen, with a highest dissolution current density measured at crack-tip. For a smooth steel specimen, the synergistic effect factor of hydrogen and stress is equal to 5.4, and the total effect of hydrogen and stress on anodic dissolution of the steel is 7.7. In the presence of a crack, the hydrogen effect factor, stress effect factor and the synergistic effect factor are approximately 4.3, 1.3 and 4.0, respectively. The total effect factor is up to 22.4, which is very close to the 20 times of difference of crack growth rate in pipelines in the presence and absence of the hydrogen involvement recorded in the field.

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