goodbadgood
Materials
- Sep 24, 2014
- 40
HI
Recently I have encountered a problem in which my carbon steel component is heavily corroded. The component is made up of rolled plates which we recently purchased. I have done XRD analysis of the scale to see if high corrosion rate is due to rolled in scale present on the plates as heavy metal loss was observed. I have got strong peaks of magnetite and low peaks of iron(III) oxide-hydroxide such as Lepidocrocite & Goethite. I have also got halites like sodium, potassium, and Chloride. So this means that the corrosion product mainly formed due to seawater exposure as the item is being transported through sea cargo. Magnetite is usually present in the mill scale so I highly doubt that it is the mill scale presence that has caused high corrosion rate in the presence of seawater. As per my understanding of general rust without mill scale magnetite should not be detected.What you guys think?
Recently I have encountered a problem in which my carbon steel component is heavily corroded. The component is made up of rolled plates which we recently purchased. I have done XRD analysis of the scale to see if high corrosion rate is due to rolled in scale present on the plates as heavy metal loss was observed. I have got strong peaks of magnetite and low peaks of iron(III) oxide-hydroxide such as Lepidocrocite & Goethite. I have also got halites like sodium, potassium, and Chloride. So this means that the corrosion product mainly formed due to seawater exposure as the item is being transported through sea cargo. Magnetite is usually present in the mill scale so I highly doubt that it is the mill scale presence that has caused high corrosion rate in the presence of seawater. As per my understanding of general rust without mill scale magnetite should not be detected.What you guys think?