Influence of microstructure on the erosion and erosion–corrosion characteristics of 316 stainless steel
Influence of microstructure on the erosion and erosion–corrosion characteristics of 316 stainless steel
The economic impact of surface damage and component failure arising from solid particle impact in the UK has been estimated in 1997 at around d20 million [1]. The additional complexity associated with erosion in a corrosive environment such as that encountered in the chemical and hydro-carbon extraction industries can significantly accelerate surface wear and material loss. In this study, surface material response of a stainless 316 alloy subject to erosion and erosion–corrosion was investigated by focused ion beam (FIB) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) techniques. Samples tested in a slurry pot apparatus using 1% uncrushed silica at 7 m/s for 60 min, both in water and 3.5% NaCl solution. Site specific FIB–TEM lamellas showed that solid particle impact resulted in extensive crater and lip formations and a martensitic phase transformation at the surface. The presence of a corrosive fluid resulted in preferential dissolution of the martensitic phase, reducing the work hardening behaviour and promoting greater elongation to failure and thus higher erosion–corrosion rates. These results are discussed in light of the extensive literature on solid particle impact and corrosion by considering the influence of nano-scale phase changes which can often only be observed using transmission electron microscopy.
Stainless steel, erosion–corrosion, slurry pot, deformation, FIB, TEM
254-262
Wood, R.J.K.
d9523d31-41a8-459a-8831-70e29ffe8a73
Walker, J.C.
b300eafd-5b0a-4cf5-86d2-735813b04c6f
Harvey, T.J.
3b94322b-18da-4de8-b1af-56d202677e04
Wang, S.C.
8a390e2d-6552-4c7c-a88f-25bf9d6986a6
Rajahram, S.S.
d44f2574-2ec1-49c9-b81a-7f73eccc00d7
30 August 2013
Wood, R.J.K.
d9523d31-41a8-459a-8831-70e29ffe8a73
Walker, J.C.
b300eafd-5b0a-4cf5-86d2-735813b04c6f
Harvey, T.J.
3b94322b-18da-4de8-b1af-56d202677e04
Wang, S.C.
8a390e2d-6552-4c7c-a88f-25bf9d6986a6
Rajahram, S.S.
d44f2574-2ec1-49c9-b81a-7f73eccc00d7
Wood, R.J.K., Walker, J.C., Harvey, T.J., Wang, S.C. and Rajahram, S.S.
(2013)
Influence of microstructure on the erosion and erosion–corrosion characteristics of 316 stainless steel.
Wear, 306 (1-2), .
(doi:10.1016/j.wear.2013.08.007).
Abstract
The economic impact of surface damage and component failure arising from solid particle impact in the UK has been estimated in 1997 at around d20 million [1]. The additional complexity associated with erosion in a corrosive environment such as that encountered in the chemical and hydro-carbon extraction industries can significantly accelerate surface wear and material loss. In this study, surface material response of a stainless 316 alloy subject to erosion and erosion–corrosion was investigated by focused ion beam (FIB) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) techniques. Samples tested in a slurry pot apparatus using 1% uncrushed silica at 7 m/s for 60 min, both in water and 3.5% NaCl solution. Site specific FIB–TEM lamellas showed that solid particle impact resulted in extensive crater and lip formations and a martensitic phase transformation at the surface. The presence of a corrosive fluid resulted in preferential dissolution of the martensitic phase, reducing the work hardening behaviour and promoting greater elongation to failure and thus higher erosion–corrosion rates. These results are discussed in light of the extensive literature on solid particle impact and corrosion by considering the influence of nano-scale phase changes which can often only be observed using transmission electron microscopy.
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Published date: 30 August 2013
Keywords:
Stainless steel, erosion–corrosion, slurry pot, deformation, FIB, TEM
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nCATS Group
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Local EPrints ID: 359387
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/359387
ISSN: 0043-1648
PURE UUID: 780fe254-aeda-48c6-af40-c53fb7be1fb2
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Date deposited: 29 Oct 2013 14:27
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:47
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Author:
S.S. Rajahram
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