01.Introduction to Corrosion

18
Introduction to Corrosion Lecture#01

Transcript of 01.Introduction to Corrosion

Page 1: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

Introduction to Corrosion

Lecture#01

Page 2: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

2

Definition

Corrosion may be defined as the destruction of a metal or an alloy because of chemical or electrochemical reaction with its surrounding environment or medium

a metal or an alloy

environment or medium

Page 3: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

3

Env

iron

men

ts in

C

orro

sion

1

1Sheir, L.L., R.A. Jarman, and G.T. Burstein, eds. Corrosion. 3rd ed. Vol. 1. 2000, Butterworth-Heinemann: Oxford.

Page 4: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

4

Corrosion: Metallurgy in Reverse2

2Fontana, M.G., Corrosion Engineering. 3rd ed. 1986, New York: McGraw-Hill.

Page 5: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

Some Corrosion Failure Examples3

3Corrosion Doctors Website. Homepage: http://www.corrosion-doctors.org

Page 6: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

6

Aloha Incident

Page 7: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

7

Aloha Incident (Contd..)

Page 8: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

8

Bhopal Accident

Page 9: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

9

Carlsbad Pipeline Explosion

Page 10: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

10

Flow Accelerated Corrosion

Page 11: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

11

Nuclear Reactor with a Hole in the Head

Page 12: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

12

Losses due to Corrosion4

4Uhlig, H.H. and R.W. Revie, Corrosion and Corrosion Control. 3rd ed. 1985, New York: John Wiley & Sons.

Page 13: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

13

Cost of Corrosion

Which cost more? Corrosion Fire Flooding Earthquake

Page 14: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

14

Cost of Corrosion(2004) in billion US$5Country Direct Cost Indirect Cost USA 303.76 200 (approximately)

Japan 59.02

Former USSR 55.01

Germany 49.26

UK 8.51

Australia 7.32

Belgium 6.75

India 3.78

Poland 3.53

Canada 3.38

.....

.....

.....

Global 510.14 940 (approximately)

5Bhaskaran, R., N. Palaniswamy, and N.S. Rengaswamy, Global Cost of Corrosion—A Historical Review, in Corrosion: Materials, Vol 13B, ASM Handbook. 2005, ASM International.

Page 15: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

15

Example of Overdesign3

An 8" in. dia oil pipeline 225 miles long with a in. wall thickness was installed with no corrosion protection system

With appropriate protection namely cathodic protection, it would have a thin wall thickness which would save 3,700 tons of steel (worth more than one

million dollar) increase internal capacity of the pipeline by about

5%.

Page 16: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

16

So……Why Study Corrosion?

Materials are precious resources Engineering design is incomplete without knowledge

of corrosion Applying knowledge of corrosion protection can

minimize disasters Corrosion – contaminate products such as

pharmaceutical, food and dairy products or luxury items like soap

Corrosion products – threat to the environment Artificial implants for the human body!!!

Page 17: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

17

Distribution of disciplines in which active corrosion engineers have graduated

Page 18: 01.Introduction to Corrosion

18

So .. What would be expected from You (a Corrosion Engineer)? Ensuring maximum life of new equipment Preservation of existing equipment Protecting or improving the quality of a product in order to

maintain or improve a competitive position. Avoiding costly interruptions of production. Reducing or eliminating losses of valuable products by spillage

or leaks. Refitting of equipment withdrawn from service because of

corrosion. Reducing hazards to life and property that might be associated

with corrosion: Explosions of pressure vessels or piping systems release of poisonous or explosive gases or vapors are a few examples.