Title: Corrosion Measurement Techniques
1Corrosion Measurement Techniques
- A copy of this presentation is available in the
CAL group in the computers in the Teaching Lab,
or via the WWW at http//www.cp.umist.ac.uk/CPC/L_
Notes
2Corrosion Measurement Techniques
- Linear Polarization Resistance
- Open Circuit Potential Decay
- Electrochemical Noise Measurement
3Polarization Curves
4Measurement Methods
- Objective
- determine current density under steady-state
conditions as a function of potential - not really practical, as this would strictly
require one sample for each potential - therefore compromise on closeness to true
steady-state
5Measurement Methods
Connect electrodes to corresponding terminals on
potentiostat
Reference Electrode - reference connection for
potential measurement
Luggin Probe - allows potential to be detected
close to metal surface
Counter Electrode (or Auxilliary Electrode or
Secondary Electrode) - provides current path into
solution
Working Electrode - metal being studied
Potentiostat controls potential
6Measurement Methods
Counter Electrode
Reference Electrode - only used to monitor
potential, not connected to potentiostat
Current controlled by control of voltage across
resistor (IV/R)
Working Electrode
Luggin Probe still needed to limit IR error
7Measurement Methods
- Swept potential or current
- Use sweep generator to produce slowly changing
potential - Sweep generator output controls potentiostat
- Record response on chart recorder (or use
computer monitoring) - Swept current not often used, as it moves through
corrosion potential very quickly
8Measurement Methods
- Potential or current step
- Step potential or current from one value to the
next, allowing time to stabilise at each new
value - Record current or potential
- May be manually controlled, or use computer to
step potential/current and take readings
9Measurement Methods
- Sweep direction
- Aim to perform experiment in such an order that
the initial polarization affects subsequent
results as little as possible - Options
- new specimen for each potential
- one specimen for cathodic polarization, and one
for anodic, both start at corrosion potential - one specimen, sweep from cathodic to anodic
10Measurement Methods
- Sweep rate (or step rate)
- Ideal, all measurements made at steady-state
- Time-dependent effects include
- Charging of double layer capacitance (I C
dV/dt) - Mass transport effects (t ? L2/D)
- Adsorbed species and surface films (Faradays
Law) - Typical sweep rates are of the order of 1 mV/s or
less
11Questions
- Consider the corrosion of iron in aerated neutral
solution, with the following parameters - Cdl 35 ?F / cm2 DO2 1.2 x 10-5 cm2 /s
- Boundary layer thickness, ? 100 ?m
- Number of iron atoms on surface ? 2?1019/cm2
- Charge on the electron 1.6 x 10-19C
- Calculate
- Capacitive current at 1 mV/s
- Characteristic diffusion time
- Limiting current density for O2 reduction (8 ppm
O2) - Time to oxidise Fe surface to FeOH (Fe) at ilim
12Cell Design
- Working electrode
- Reference electrode
- Counter electrode
- Solution
- Mass transport
13Working Electrode
- Requirements
- reproducible
- representative
- free of crevices
- free of edge effects
- free of galvanic effects
- free of water-line effects
14Working Electrode
Apply thin layer of epoxy to minimise stress and
risk of crevice formation
Weld or solder connecting wire to specimen
Apply thick layer of epoxy to seal connecting
tube and for strength
Pretreat specimen for good adhesion
Carefully grind surface to expose metal
Clean surface - dont use acetone
15Working Electrode
- Stern-Makrides electrodes
Lip sealbetween PTFE case and electrode
16Working Electrode
17Reference Electrode
- Commonly use Saturated Calomel Electrode (SCE)
- Properties may degrade with time (and misuse)
- check one against another (should not be more
than 1 to 2 mV difference) - do not pass current through the reference
electrode (e.g. do not connect to working or
counter electrode) - do not allow to dry out
18Reference Electrode
- Solution in SCE (or Ag/AgCl electrode) is
saturated KCl - beware of chloride contamination of test solution
by Cl- leaking from reference electrode - make sure solution remains saturated
19Luggin Probe
- A Luggin probe should be used whenever there is a
significant current applied to the electrode
Electrode
Luggin probe allows point at which potential is
measured to be close to electrode surface (around
3 times tip diameter is best)
20Counter electrode
- Counter electrode should allow current to pass
with tolerable polarization - Often claimed that counter electrode should have
much larger area than working electrode, but this
is not often necessary for corrosion studies - Usually use platinum or graphite, although
stainless steel can be used in some situations
(e.g. where only anodic polarization of specimen
is used)
21Solution
- Requirements
- as high a conductivity as possible (add
supporting electrolyte, such as sodium
perchlorate?) - remain the same (pH, composition) throughout the
experiment - ensure that volume is adequate - oxygen concentration often critical - aerate by
bubbling air or O2 or deaerate with N2 or Ar - most reactions temperature sensitive, so control,
or at least record, temperature
22Mass transport
- Methods of controlling mass transport
- rotating disk or cylinder
- flow channel
- jet impingement
- gas bubbling
23Plotting of Polarization Curves
- Comparison of log-i and linear-i plots
- Identification of anodic and cathodic regions on
log-i plots - Orientation of plots
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26E log I - old plotting method
E
log i
27Interpretation of Polarization Curves
- Addition of reactions on log-I graphs
- Tafel regions
- Mass transport control
- Active-passive transition
- Transpassive corrosion
- Pitting Corrosion
28Tafel regions
- A Tafel region is a straight line in the
E-logi plot - For a reliable Tafel slope
- the line should be straight for at least one
decade (in this context a decade implies a change
of current density by a factor of ten, i.e a
difference of 1 in log i ) - the region should be next to Ecorr
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30Tafel Extrapolation
- Extrapolate anodic or cathodic Tafel region, or
both, back to Ecorr, when the current density is
icorr - In aerated neutral solutions, where mass
transport limited oxygen reduction is the main
cathodic reaction, the cathodic reaction does not
have a valid Tafel slope, but the anodic slope
can sometimes be used
31Question
- How can we estimate the rate of hydrogen
evolution during free corrosion? - Estimate the value for the graph shown.
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33Mass transport control
- When the supply of a reactant becomes mass
transport controlled, we observe a limiting
current density - The most common case occurs for oxygen as a
cathodic reactant in neutral solutions - NOTE - the diffusion of a reaction product away
from the electrode will not affect the rate of
the forward reaction
34Solution Resistance Effects
- At high currents the potential drop associated
with the solution resistance can be significant - It is generally referred to as an IR error
- Gives a straight line on E-i plots
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37Active-passive transition
- As a passive film develops, it covers the surface
and shuts off the dissolution reaction, leading
to an active-passive transition
38Active-passive transition
- For stainless steel we sometimes see two
active-passive transitions, on for Chromium, and
one for Iron
39Transpassive corrosion
- A passive metal (notably Cr and Fe) may start to
dissolve at a very positive potential when a
higher oxidation state (e.g. Cr6 as chromate) is
formed - This is known as transpassive corrosion, and will
give something like a second activation-controlled
reaction - For alloys the behaviour will be complicated by
the differing behaviours of the alloy components
40Anodic Polarization Curve for Stainless Steel
Activation-controlled dissolution
Active-passive transition
Active peak for iron
Transpassive corrosion of Cr
Oxygen reduction
Overall anodic curve
E
log i
41Pitting Corrosion
- Pitting shows up as an increasing anodic current
before (at a less positive potential than)
transpassive corrosion or oxygen evolution,
usually preceded by noise - E-logi plot does not follow same path if scan
direction is reversed, but current is greater
(since pit continues to grow)
42Pitting Corrosion
Noise spikes due to meta-stable pitting
Current continues to increase after reversal of
scan
Pit eventually re-passivates
E
log i
43What is going on?
Stainless Steel in Aerated Sulphuric Acid
Anodic
Cathodic
E
Anodic
Cathodic
log i
44Linear Polarization Resistance Measurement
45LPRM Theory
- For an activation controlled reaction
Exchange current density
Equilibrium potential
Tafel slope based on exponential (i.e. mV for a
change of 1 in ln(i))
46LPRM Theory
- Summing for two reactions
- Rearrange and convert to b rather than ?
Anodic partial current density (icorr)
Because ?c is taken as negative
Anodic Tafel slope (positive)
Cathodic Tafel slope (negative)
Cathodic partial current density ( -icorr)
Tafel slope based on a decade change in current
(i.e. a change of 1 in log i )
Stern-Geary coefficient
47LPRM Measurement Methods
- Control variable
- Waveform
- Cell configuration
- Sweep rate
48LPRM Control Variable
- Potential control
- potential range can be optimised
- problems with drift of Ecorr
- Current control
- potential range depends on Rp
- measurement inherently centred about i 0
49LPRM Measurement Waveform
- Triangle wave
- can measure di/dt at i 0
- requires relatively complex instruments
- Square wave (switch between i and -i)
- simple instruments
- simple to automate
- Sine wave
- simplest theory for frequency effects
- complex to perform measurement
50LPRM Cell Configuration
- Two electrode
- assume Rp is the same for two similar electrodes
and measure cell resistance ( 2Rp Rsol) - easy, no reference electrode required
- Three electrode
- use conventional counter, reference and working
electrodes - provides lower solution resistance, therefore
better for low conductivity solutions - more complex instrumentation
51LPRM Recommendations
- Use three electrode measurement with triangle
waveform for laboratory studies - Use two electrode measurement with square
waveform for simple corrosion monitoring (use
three electrodes for high resistance solutions) - Use potential control when icorr variation is
large - Use current control when Ecorr varies a lot
- When both icorr and Ecorr vary use current
control, but adapt current to keep potential
range reasonable
52LPRM Interpretation
- Determination of B value
- calculate from Tafel slopes
- correlation with weight loss
- arbitrary value
- 26 mV for activation control
- 52 mV for one reaction at limiting current
53LPRM Sweep Rate
- Must be sufficiently slow for current charging
double layer capacitance to be much less than
total current - Characteristic time given by RctCdl - cycle time
should be at least 3 times this - Need not be slow enough to allow diffusion
processes to respond (as the basic theory is not
valid for diffusion processes)
54LPRM Problems
- Theoretically, either
- both reactions must be activation controlled, or
- one reaction must be activation controlled and
the other mass-transport limited - In practice it is rare for real systems to meet
these constraints, and application of LPRM is not
theoretically justified - Solution resistance adds to measured Rp, and
produces lower apparent corrosion rate
55Equivalent Circuits
- An electrical circuit with the same properties as
a metal-solution interface - The simplest circuit is a resistor, Rct,
corresponding to the polarization resistance, in
parallel with a capacitor, Cdl, corresponding to
the double layer capacitance
56Equivalent Circuits
- An electrical circuit with the same properties as
a metal-solution interface - The Randles equivalent circuit adds a series
resistor, corresponding to the solution resistance
57Analysis of Solution Resistance
- If we analyse the full response to the LPRM
measurement, we can estimate Rsol, Cdl and Rct
The voltage across Rsol is given by
Voexp(-t/RsolCdl) When t RsolCdl, VVoexp(-1)
Estimate Cdl from the exponential decay. The time
for V to fall to e-1 (37) of the initial value
is RsolCdl
58Open Circuit Potential Decay
- Similar to analysis of LPRM measurement
- charge double layer capacitance by applying a
current or potential - disconnect charging current
- monitor decay of potential
59Open Circuit Potential Decay
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