Abstract

This paper reports a voltammetric study of bronze in synthetic seawater (SSW). The effects of buffering and deoxygenating were particularly visible in the transpassive region. The breakdown of the anodic passive film on bronze leads to a well-defined activation peak in the transpassive region typical of a nucleation and growth of pits. The breakdown potential of the passivity was shown to vary with the experimental conditions, namely, with buffering and deoxygenating. Buffering has shown to lead to more stable passive films and deoxygenating to higher oxidation currents. Scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectrometer (SEM/EDS) studies of bronze samples with 1-month exposure in non-deoxygenated buffered and non-buffered SSW under open circuit potential have shown significant differences in their morphology: a uniformly cracked surface and a surface showing large and spherical precipitates of about 50 μm uniformly distributed along the surface, respectively, for bronze coupons in buffered (pH 9) and in non-buffered SSW. The EDS technique has identified Cu, O, Cl and Na on the corrosion products of bronze in non-buffered SSW, whilst in buffered media, Sn was also identified. In non-buffered media, open circuit potentials have shown to be all the time less negative than in the buffered media. After 1-month exposure the E OCP of bronze samples in both media seem to converge to −0.131 and −0.155 V vs Ag|AgCl, respectively. This potential can be assigned to the formation of cuprite, Cu2O and nantokite, CuCl. The analysis of the SEM images after the removal of the corrosion products has shown descuprification with higher intensity on the surface from coupons in non-buffered SSW.

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