Top Banner
Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007
31

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Dec 27, 2015

Download

Documents

Mae Daniel
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Basic Corrosion:

Recurring Questions & Answers

Prof. Garry W. Warren

November 2007

Page 2: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Rationale

This presentation provides common examples of recurring questions students pose in developing their proficiency in electrochemistry & corrosion.

Typically these questions recur every year, year after year. The vast majority of such questions relate to critical basic

information covered in the first few weeks, i.e. the foundation upon which the rest of the course depends.

Computer software is a practical way to expose students to these questions.

Page 3: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Recurring Questions

Most recurring questions asked fall into one of the following areas:

– Terminology (knowing new terms, e.g. cathode vs. anode)– Thermodynamics (e.g. using the Nernst equation)– Sign conventions (e.g. G = +nFE vs. G = –nFE)– Reference electrodes– Understanding the significance of the cathodic reaction – Understanding “corrosion potentials”

Page 4: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What are the critical terms to know?

Electrochemistry (corrosion) is loaded with interrelated terms somewhat unique to the discipline, for example:

AnodeAnodicActive

Oxidation Oxidation potential

EMF series

Electrolytic cell

CathodeCathodic

NobleReduction

Reduction potential

Galvanic series

Galvanic cell

Terms on left & right are related, but are NOT equal. It is best to clearly define all of these from day one!

Page 5: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Critical Terminology (con’t)

On the first day of class students are provided a handout entitled “Important Corrosion Concepts to Remember” defining most of these terms.

That handout is available here:

http://bama.ua.edu/~gwarren/ The explanation of electrolytic cells vs. galvanic cells

is best covered after some exposure to the EMF series and Nernst equation (also found at the end of this presentation).

Page 6: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What are the most important things to know about the EMF Series?

Emphasize the title “Standard Reduction Potentials, Eº” or “Standard Oxidation Potentials, Eº”

Each potential is tied to a half cell reaction. Electrochemical reactions (corrosion) must involve two half

cells: one oxidation and one reduction. The half cell assigned a voltage of zero is the “reference” half

cell. Always include V vs. SHE or V vs. SCE (only then is choice

of reference half cell clear).

Page 7: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Is there a connection between G & V?

The connection between Gibbs energy (G) and potential or voltage (V) is given by either:

G = –nFE OR G = +nFE The choice is a convention, either is correct. Persistent repetition of the text’s choice of –nFE or +nFE

is worthwhile for two reasons:

– To emphasize that this is the text’s convention

– To emphasize the importance of identifying the chosen convention when consulting other texts or references

I prefer using G = –nFE, until students have some experience with the EMF series & the Nernst equation.

Page 8: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Can I connect a sign convention to EMF Series? Imagine three EMF series (no others are possible!). The words “oxidation” or “reduction” with respect to ½ cell potentials

also indicates selection of –nFE convention.

When you reverse the reactions, change sign of Eº.

Sign of Eº does NOT change if reactions are reversed, hence the title omits “oxidation” or “reduction”

Values of Eº in these 2 lists are identical.

StandardPotentials

(G = +nFE) Eº (V)

Cu2+/Cu + 0.342H+/ H2

0.0 Ni2+/Ni - 0.250

Standard OxidationPotentials

(G = –nFE) Eº (V)

Cu = Cu2+ +2e– – 0.342H2 = 2H+ + 2e– 0.0

Ni = Ni2+ +2e– + 0.250

Standard ReductionPotentials

(G = –nFE) Eº (V)

Cu2+ +2e– = Cu + 0.3422H+ + 2e– = H2

0.0Ni2+ +2e– = Ni – 0.250

Page 9: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Why doesn’t the sign of Eº change for +nFE? Imagine three EMF series (no others are possible).

Standard OxidationPotentials

(G = –nFE) Eº (V)

Cu = Cu2+ +2e– – 0.342H2 = 2H+ + 2e– 0.0

Ni = Ni2+ +2e– + 0.250

Standard ReductionPotentials

(G = –nFE) Eº (V)

Cu2+ +2e– = Cu + 0.3422H+ + 2e– = H2

0.0Ni2+ +2e– = Ni – 0.250

StandardPotentials

(G = +nFE) Eº (V)

Cu2+/Cu + 0.342H+/H2

0.0 Ni2+/Ni – 0.250

Values of Eº in these 2 lists are identical.

For –nFE, sign of Eº “+” or “–” is chosen to agree with the thermodynamic tendency.

For +nFE, sign of Eº is the experimentally observed value of selected ½ cell when connected with H+/H2 half cell, so only one value is ever observed.

Page 10: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Ecorr Software

Computer Aided Instruction (CAI) is a practical way to expose students to recurring questions. – Permits students to work outside class at any time– Allows more class time for other topics

Ecorr software – An introduction to corrosion, electrode potentials & electro-

chemical thermodynamics. – Focuses on many recurring corrosion questions via examples

and practice problems.

Ecorr is available at MaterialsTechnology@TMS:

http://materialstechnology.tms.org/educ/educdigital.asp

Page 11: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What does Ecorr do?

The following screens give a number of examples. Some previous exposure to thermodynamics is useful

The user interacts with the program in various ways:

– Answers to questions or calculations are entered by typing in boxes or by clicking buttons

– Clicking on red “hot text” opens popup windows with more information on that term, concept or calculation.

– Standard potentials are available in a pull down menu

– Menu allows user to navigate to other parts of program

– Any screen can be printed.

Page 12: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Can you use potentials to predict reactions?Below is one of several examples addressing this question for standard conditions. Potentials are hot text and remind the user how each was obtained.

Page 13: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What if activities are not unity?First the relation of G to E yields the Nernst equation. Activity, activity coefficient and concentration are defined via hot text popup windows.

Page 14: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What if activities are not unity?After applying the Nernst equation to half cells, several examples for overall reactions are given. Standard potentials are obtained first as shown below.

Page 15: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What if activities are not unity?After obtaining Eº’s the user is led term by term through the Nernst equation to calculate the overall reaction potential. Each box requires user input, and the final answer requires a calculation.

There are several other examples similar to the one shown here.

Page 16: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What’s the significance of the reference electrode?In principle any half cell can be selected as a reference, but only some are experimentally convenient. When selected as a reference it is assigned a value of zero volts, e.g. hydrogen or SCE shown below.

Page 17: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

How do I convert a potential vs. SCE to another reference electrode?

Such conversions are simply adjusting the zero point on the potential scale using the Eº value of the current reference electrode on the “new” scale.

Two more examples involving different reference electrodes are given.

Page 18: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What’s the difference between a half cell potential and a corrosion potential?

The diagram shows that a corrosion potential is a combination of two half cells, the oxidation of Fe and the reduction of O2?

Page 19: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Why is the cathodic reaction important?Several possible cathodic reactions exist. Knowing which one occurs offers different choices for limiting corrosion.

Red numbers reveal popup windows that show how the value was calculated.

Page 20: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

How can I determine the cathodic reaction?

The decision is a thermodynamic one. Through Nernst eqn calculations the user determines Sum A and Sum B, then selects an answer.

Page 21: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What’s the difference between the Galvanic Series & EMF Series?

After giving a definition of each series, the user “measures” the corrosion potential for each metal by clicking & dragging each one into the white box.This shows that Ecorr’s are not single half cells.

Page 22: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What’s the difference between galvanic corrosion and regular corrosion?

The difference is demonstrated with a “movie” that places the reduction half cell on the surface of the more noble metal for galvanic corrosion.

Page 23: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Joining dissimilar metals is often necessary, how is galvanic corrosion minimized?

Page 24: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What’s an example of a poor choice of two dissimilar metals?

Shown is one example, for Fe and brass.

User must enter answers to questions in boxes.

Page 25: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

What’s an example of a poor choice of relative areas?

Combining stainless and Al is rarely a good choice, but if necessary one option is better than the other.

The user must click on the appropriate image to answer.

Page 26: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Sign conventions are really confusing, what are my choices?

This section of Ecorr can be omitted if desired. It is probably most useful for advanced study.

–nFE = non-IUPAC

+nFE = IUPAC

Page 27: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

How many possibilities are there?

The user can click on each button, work with the same example for each case and compare them.

ONLY 4 permutations are possible!

Page 28: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

How can I ever remember this?

Practice, practice, practice!

Using the buttons on this summary screen the user can review any of the four possible permutations.

Page 29: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Galvanic Cell

Reactions occur spontaneously when connected by a conductor or electrolyte.

Chemical energy is converted to electrical energy.

Examples: AA battery, car battery (when it is being discharged), i.e. nearly every corrosion reaction

Electrolytic Cell

Reactions do not occur without applying an external potential such that Eexternal > Ecell.

Electrical energy is used to cause the desired chemical reaction.

Examples: electroplating of Cu, Au, Ag, car battery (when it is being charged)

This question is best answered by comparing one with the other.

What’s the difference between an electrolytic cell and a galvanic cell?

Page 30: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Isn’t the anode always negative?

Zn Cu

Zn+2 sol’n Cu+2 sol’n

e-

ANODE CATHODE

- +

Zn = Zn+2+2e- Cu+2+2e- = Cu oxidation reduction

Pt Pt

e-

ANODE CATHODE

- +

-PS+

2H2O = O2+2H++2e- 2H++2e- = H2

oxidation reduction

O2 H2

Galvanic Cell Electrolytic Cell (electrolysis of water)

Absolutely not! See the two examples below. Never associate the sign of E with “anode” or “cathode.” What is always true is anode = oxidation & cathode = reduction.

Page 31: Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Basic Corrosion: Recurring Questions & Answers Prof. Garry W. Warren November 2007.

Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering

Remember

Corrosion is inevitable. Only under impractical conditions can it be 100% eliminated, but we can reduce or minimize it.

Ecorr program downloads are available through MaterialsTechnology@TMS

http://materialstechnology.tms.org/educ/educdigital.asp Contact information:

– Comments are welcome, please reply via MaterialsTechnology@TMS