Abstract

The effect of nitrogen and carbon bombardment on the corrosion behavior of three different stainless steels (AISI 304, AISI 316L and AISI 430) is discussed in this work. Nitrogen and Carbon was entered into the lattice in order to generate a rich region near the surface by a relatively new method called plasma electrolysis. Different ion bombardment doses under different applied voltages and thus different electrical fields (230, 245, 260 volts) at 330 mS/Cm of electrical conductivity of specific electrolyte have been tested to optimize the ion bombardment doses for each steel. The corrosion measurements were carried out in sodium chloride solution by using potentiodynamic scanning (PDS) and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). The experimental results showed that the effect of N and C ion bombardment mainly depends on the microstructure and/or composition of the stainless steels. Less compact structures and/or less amount of alloying elements (as occurs with the body centered cubic, ferritic AISI 430) achieve bigger changes with this modification, whereas on stainless steels with a larger amount of alloying elements and / or more compact structures (like the face centered cubic, austenitic AISI 316L) ion bombardment slightly modifies the corrosion behavior.

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