Rapid MIC attack on 2205 duplex stainless steel pipe in a yacht
2014; Elsevier BV; Volume: 42; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.engfailanal.2014.04.001
ISSN1873-1961
Autores Tópico(s)Concrete Corrosion and Durability
ResumoA duplex stainless steel (2205) pipe in a new yacht suffered an extremely high corrosion rate (40 mm/y) failure. ESEM/EDS and XPS analyses indicate that the failure mode was MIC. The bacteria attached preferentially on the austenite grains forming the colony “centre”. The preferential corrosion on the austenite grains formed the “sponge” feature. The remaining ferrite grains became the “skeleton” structure. The sulphate detected by XPS suggests SOB involvement in the MIC. A hypothesis of SRB and SOB proliferating symbiotically proposed in this paper can explain the extremely high corrosion rate. SRB transferred sulphate from seawater to sulphide. SOB converted the sulphide to the extremely acid (H2SO4). SOB should be the main culprit of the failure through its high corrosion rate. The nitriding effect around the FZ had been confirmed by SES and EDS analyses. The high nitrogen contents attracted the bacteria to attach and proliferate. This finding may uncover the mystery of why weldments are susceptible to MIC.
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